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Transcript of The Advocate - Dec. 28, 1961 - CORE
Seton Hall UniversityeRepository @ Seton Hall
The Catholic Advocate Archives and Special Collections
12-28-1961
The Advocate - Dec. 28, 1961Catholic Church
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Part of the Catholic Studies Commons, and the Missions and World Christianity Commons
The AdvocateOfficial Publication of the Archdiocese of Newark, N. J., and Diocese of Paterson, N. J.
Vol. 11, No. 1 THURSDAY, DECEMBER 28, 1961 PRICE: TEN CENTS
Shun Thought of Force,
Pope John Asks WorldVATICAN CITY (NC) - Pope John
XXIII called on the rulers of nations to
"shun all thought of force,” as he re-
newed his pleas for peace in the fourthChristmas message of his reign.
Pope John broadcast his 3,000-wordmessage to the world over Radio Vati-
can and other networks. Following thebroadcast, translations in 30 languageswere put on the air.
THE PONTIFF dectarcd that the
only means of achieving peace todayis for men to imitate Christ’s goodnessin a world where men have become
"calculating, suspicious and selfish.”The Pope’s talk took into account
the destructive possibilities of nuclearpower and warned niters that they tooare men, “fragile and mortal.” He toldthem that they have received their
power from God “not to destroy butto build, not to divide but to unite, notto cause tears to be shed but to provideemployment and security.”
"WE CANNOT believe,” he said,"that the terrifying energy now underthe control of man will he released forthe world’s destruction. For side byside with elements of fear and appre-hension, there are positive signs of a
good will that is constructive and pro-ductive of good.
"While we give thanks to the Lord,the source of goodness, we also givevoice to a heartfelt appeal that all thosewho control the economic forces shouldrisk everything —but not the peace ofthe world and the lives of men toseek every meansthat modern progresshas put at their disposal to increase
the welfare and security of the world,and not to sow distrust and mutual
suspicion.“And again to use the words of
our encyclical ‘Mater ct Magistra,’ ‘wepoint out with sadness
. . .that while
on the one hand are brought out in
strong relief situations of want, andthe specter of misery and hungerhaunts us; on the other hand scientific
discoveries, technical inventions andeconomic resources are being used,often extensively, to provide terribleinstrument of ruin and death'.”
POPE JOHN recalled that “this is
now the fourth Christmas on which we,the poor son of the people if we
may openly express what we inwardlyconsider ourself to be— called to thesummit of the priesthood and govern-ment of the Church, have by the helpof God's grace put all our heart intodeclaring this great message of peace.”
The Pope outlined the troubles andconcerns that currently face mankind.
“If we look at the events of recent
times, we might well say that in our
day tear and alarm are producing a
burning fever of estrangement one from
another, and though this is unconsciousin many cases, it is for all that notice-able in dealing with others and leads
to continuous disturbance in domestic,social, civil and international relation-
ships.” he said.“If we consider mutual relation-
ships as they exist today in nationaland international affairs, we can seehow far they still are from the divine
teaching which shines in the age ofthe Old Testament and bursts out intoperfect light with the coming of theDivine Master in the fullness of time.All His teaching is an invitation to
peace.”
BUT TODAY, the Pope said, “Thereis often a spirit opposed to peace.”
Pope John then noted the spiritualfailure of modern man. He said "it is
the pride of the man of power who
destroys; it is the greed of the man
of wealth who hardens his heart toIhe needs of his brothers; it is thecallousness of the complacent man
who pays no heed to the great cryof suffering which exists in the world;it is the selfishness of the man whothinks exclusively of himself.
"In every case it is the goodnessof Christ which is lacking and whichabove all must provide the antidote to
this spirit of contradiction and hard-
heartedness. paving the way to a
more peaceful attitude to things."Pope John declared that the "sup-
plication for peace which rises up this
year from the crib of Bethlehem shouldbe an invocation of godness.” He addedthat it “should be all the more pressing,for mutual distrust is making conditions
progressively worse.”
IN A REFERENCE to the cold war,the Pope pointed to "the state of fear-fulness in which men are living be-cause of flaunted violence and fostered
enmity."“It is clear,” he continued, “that
this is giving rise to a general coolnessand making it more and more wide-spread." He declared that “man is no
longer a brother—good, merciful andloving to his fellow men—but has be-come a stranger, calculating, suspiciousand selfish.”
To counteract this. Pope John catt-ed on mankind to imitate the good-ness of the Christ Child and to fostergoodness in the individual, the family,the community and all humanity.
The Pope criticized the world press
for contributing “to the production ofan atmosphere of aversion, enmity anddiscord.”
lIE THEN SPOKE directly to worldleaders:
"You also are men, fragile andmortal. Upon you arc the anxious eyes
of your fcllowmen, who arc first yourhrothers before they arc your subjects.With the authority which we have re-
ceived from Jesus Christ, we say; Shunall thought of force; think of the tra-
gedy of initiating a chain reaction ofacts, decisions and resentments thatcould erupt into rash and irreparabledeeds."
By adopting positive forms of ac-tion. the I’opc said, world leaders wouldbe applying "that goodness that shouldpenetrate every aspect of human life.This goodness is power and dominion
over oneself, patience with others,charity that is neither extinguishednor dimmed."
IN CLOSING, the Pope’s thoughtsturned to the suffering who are deniedjustice and charity.
"We cannot pass over the anxietythat our heart feels at the thoughtthat when next Christmas Day dawns
upon the world there will still be peo-ple without peace, without security andwithout religious liberty people tor-mented by the specter of war andfamine.” he said.
"For them our most ferventprayers and supplications rise to
heaven, together with the paternalwish that all difficulties and contro-versies may be resolved equitably, anda renewed appeal lo the rulers of allnations that through their united cf-forts justice, equity and that longedfor peace may be realized."
(See text, Page 10)
Holy Father Calls Council for 1962VATICAN CITY—Pope John
XXIII cited the existence of“a society in crises” on Christ-mas Day as he published a
Papa] Bull formally convok-
ing the Second Vatican Coun-cil.
The bull was read in St. Pe-
ter's Basilica by ArchbishopPcricle Fclici after a Masscelebrated by the Holy Father.
It revealed that the councilwill be held in 1962 but did notset an opening date.
THE BULL IS titled "Hu-
mane Salutis" (human salva-tion), the title being takenfrom the first words of theLatin text. It was read alsoin the basilicas of St. Paul's
Outsidc-thc-Walls, St. JohnLatcran and St. Mary Major.
Pope John in his bull saidhe was speaking to a world
"lost, confused and anxious un-
der the continual threat of
new frightful conflicts."
He said the council was be-
ing called “to offer an oppor-tunity for all men of goodwill
to turn their thoughts andresolutions to peace: a peace
that can and must come,
above all. front spiritual and
supernatural realities, from
human intelligence and con-
science enlightened and guided
by God. Creator and Redeem-
er of mankind.”
IN CITING HIS reasons for
calling the council, he said:
“The Church today is watch-
ing a society in crises. While
mankind is at the threshold
of anew era. grave and im-
mense tasks await the Church
just as in the most tragic
epochs of its history.”These tasks, the Pope said,
“concern, in fact, the need of
bringing the vivifying and
perennial energies of the Goi-
pel to the modern world
a world that exalts itself inits conquests in the technicaland scientific fields.”
Modern society, the Pontiffsaid, is characterized by greatmaterial progress without a
corresponding moral progress.And this situation is com-
plicated by “the existence ofmilitant atheism operating on
a world-wide scale.”
ALTHOUGH lIE did not
mention communism by name,
the Pope said that attempt*to build a stable society with-
out Christ arc destined to he
ineffective, “to crumble andfall with the first wind.”
Pope John, while noting that
some people are discouraged.
said there is reason for hope.“The very scientific progresswhich has given to man the
possibility of creating catas-
trophic implements for his
own destruction has raisedanguished questions," he said.
“It has forced human beingsto become more thoughtful,more conscious of their own
limitations, more desirous of
peace, more attentive to theimportance of spiritual values.And it has accelerated the
process of closer collaborationand reciprocal integration
among individuals, classes andnations.”
The Pontiff therefore saw
“an urgent duty to call togeth-er our children to give the
Church the opportunity to con-
tribute more efficaciously tothe solutions of the problemsof the modern age."
LATER, AT AN audiencein the Clementine Hall, wherehe gave his traditional bless-ing "Urbi ct Orbl” (To theCity and to the World), thePope expressed the hope thatthe New Year would see "theend of all wars, the ralmingof alt discord and a worldunited in a single cry toheaven, a cry of fraternaland filial love: *Our Father.Who arc in heaven’."
The Pope gave hts blessingat the audience because in-
clement weather had prevent-ed him from making an ap-
pearance and speaking fromthe balcony of St. Peter's.
However, be did go to thewindow of his apartment to
wave to the small crowd whirnhad braved the rain in St. Pe-ter's Square.
POPE JOHN hail opened Ihe
holiday period by receiving
Ihe Sacred College of Car-dinals on Christmas Eve
l.ater. he ottered MidnightMass fur the diplomats ae
credited to Ihe Holy See amiaddressed them after the
Mass in the Clementine Hall.In response to the greetings
of the Sacred College of Car-dinals. he called his recentencyclical "Mater ct Mag-istra" and his plans to convokethe council "motives for the
serene peace that, everythingelse notwithstanding, we en-
joy this Christmas."
Between that ceremony andhis celebration of Mass, liereturned to his apartmentfrom where he blessed some
to.ooo ppoplc in St. Peter’sSquare and wished them a
Merry Christmas.
SPEAKING TO diplomatsafter Mass, he issued a pleato world leaders to seek peacethrough negotiations "even ifthese demand sacrifices andrenunciations.”
"The judgment of history.”he said, “will be severe withthose who will not have doneall in their power to free hu-
manity of the pest of war."
However, he said, the worldrannot seek "peace at anyprice." hot must seek peacebased on "justice which recog-
nizes the legitimate rights ofothers and respects them;peace which results from freeand loyal negotiations.”
Archbishop Binz
In St. Paul SeeWASHINGTON (NC) Pope
John XXIII has transferred
Archbishop Leo Binz from tho
Dubuque Archdiocese to that
of St. Paul, which has been
vacant since the death of Arch-
bishop William O. Brady in
Rome last Oclobcr.
The Archdiocese of St. Paul
will he the third See in which
Archbishop Binz has served as
a member of the hierarchy,lie has held offices of highresponsibility almost continu-
ously since his ordination inRome 37 years ago.
ARCHBISHOP BINZ washorn in Stockton, 111., Uct. 31,l'joo. lie attended l/iras Col-
lege. Dubuque, before enteringSt. Mary's Seminary. Balti-
more. for his philosophical stu-
dies. He took his course* in
theology at the Sulpician Sem-
inary in this city amt IheNorth American College in
Rome.
He was ordained inRome on Mar. 15, 1924, andfor the next two year* took
post-ordination studies at theGregorian University there, at
the same time serving as an
instructor in the North Ameri-can College.
Returning to Illinois, the fu-ture Archbishop filled several
pastoral assignments; was
secretary to the Bishop ofRockford and was later Chan-
cellor of the Diocese. He
joined the staff of tin- Ap..-,tolic Delegation here in 1936and served as secretary until
November, 1942, when he was
named Coadjutor Bishop and
Apostolic Administrator of theDiocese of Winona, Minn.
IN NOVEMBER, 1949, Bish-
op Binz was named Titular
Archbishop of Silyutu and
Coadjutor with right of suc-
cession to Archbishop HenryP. Hnhlman of Dubuque, lowa,and he eventually succeeded
to the See. A year before.Pope Pius XII had named
Archbishop Binz an Assistant
at the Papal Throne,
Archbishop Binz has servedas president general of the Na-
tional Catholic Educational
Association, and as a mem-
ber of (lie NCWC Administra-
tive Board.
Archbishop Binz
Pope Lauds Mothers
Of New PriestsVATICAN CITY (NC)—Pope
John XXIII paid tribute in an
audience to mothers of the 54
newly ordained priests of theNorth American College in
Rome.
The Pope received in au-
dience the 54 priests and more
than 350 parents and friends
who had been present for their
ordination Dec. 20 in St. Pet-er’s Basilica.
The group was led by Arch-
bishop Martin J. O’Connor,rector of the North American
College, who had ordained the
priests, including Rev. Donald
C. Smith of Jersey City.
POPS JOHN lauded the
mothers present for havingfostered religious vocations
within the family. He said the
occasion reminded him of his
mother, who had always been
proud of having given a son to
the service of the laird.
lie urged the priests to imi-
tate the virtues of Cardinal
(i ilia Costa of Florence, who
died Dec. 22. The Cardinal's
n m,t outstanding chatacteris-
tic was simplicity, said ihe
Pope. He also said that he
often hears comments on the
great religious fervor of
American Catholics from Ku
ropcan Bishops returningfrom the U. S.
ORDAINED: Rev. Donald
S. Smith of Jersey City was
one of 54 students of North
American College ordainedat St. Peter’s Basilica on
Dec. 20 by ArchbishopMartin J. O’Connor, rector
of the college. FatherSmith was the only sem-
inarian from the Archdio-cese of Newark in the
group.
THEIR GIFT: Robert Kyak presents to Archbishop Boland one of the statuettes
of Our Lady made by the children who attend St. Philip Neri School in Newark.
Looking on, left to right, are Barbara Konsack, Florence Ruebin and Charles O’Brien.
The gifts were presented to the Archbishop at the school Dec. 19 in gratitude forhis patronage of the work with retarded children in the archdiocese.
TOY DISPLAY: On Dec. 19, Archbishop Boland made his annual tour of the toydisplays of the Mt. Carmel Guild in the four counties of the Archdiocese of New-
ark. Above, he inspects a doll at the Bergen County office in Hackensack, present-ed by Mrs. Charles Lehman, county president. Looking on, left to right, are Mrs.
Henry Soule, chairman of the display, Rev. Thomas G. Grant, Bergen County di-
rector. and Msgr. Joseph A. Dooling, archdiocesan director.
Cardinal Dalla Costa of
Florence Dies at 89FLORENCE. Italy (NC) -
Elia Cardinal dalla Costa.
Archbishop of Florence for 30
years and the oldest memberof the College of Caadinals,died Dec. 22 at the age of 89.
Cardinal dalla Costa, noted
lor lus efforts on behalf of the
poor and ill, died of a heartailment brought on hv an at-
tack of influenza. The day be-fore his death he had receivedtho Viaticum Holy Com-
muniun for those in danger of
death —and the blessing of
Pope John XXIII.
ON HEARING of the Cardi-
nal’s death, the Pope went
immediately (o his privaterhapel lo offer Mass and re-
mained (or a long time in
prayer alter Mass.
Pope John sent a telegramto Coadjutor Archbishop Er-
ntcncgildo Florit of Florence,
saying that he intended tohave another Mass offered
Dec. 23 for the deceased Car-dinal.
He added: "The links which
hind us to the lamented Cardi-nal remind us more vividly of
his merits and make the griefof his death all the deeper."
RABBI FERNANDO Bol-
grado of Florence paid publictribute to Cardinal dalla Cos-
ta. He recalled that he and
eight members of his familywere sheltered from the nazis
in a religious house at tho
Cardinal's orders.Rabbi Bclgrado described
his anxiety in those days, say-
ing: “I had no home, I had
no food, I had nothing. Wherecould I direct my steps? To
whom could I turn? The doorsof the Bishop's house were
open to everyone, and I cross-
ed tho threshold.”
Rabbi Bclgrado said thoCardinal told him: “ ‘The con-
vents are full but we shall find
room for you ... ’ This was
one of the numberless acts of
kindness of Cardinal dalla
Costa, who was a prelate ofinfinite kindness."
The Rabbi summed up his
opinion of the late Cardinal
thus: “The Jewish communityof Florence cannot forget the
acts of brotherhood and of
help that the late Cardinal
performed (or Jews during
the sad period of the nazl-
fascist persecutions.“Asa man and as a Kahhl,
therefore, I turn with revered
thoughts to the memory of
this pious and just man whowill be welcomed under the
wings of Divine Providence.”
THE CARDINAL’S death
reduces the number of Cardi-
nals to 80, of whom 28 aro
Italians,
He is the fifth Cardi-
nal to die during 1961. Those
who died earlier this yearwere Marcello Cardinal Mini-
mi, Secretary of the Sacred
Consistorial Congregation; Do-
menico Cardinal Tardlni, Pa-
pal Secretary of State, Nicola
Cardinal Canali, Grand Peni-
tentiary, and Jozef Cardinal
van Rocy, Archbishop of Ma-
lines-Brussols. He is the 14th
Cardinal to die during Pop*John's pontificate.
Elia dalla Costa was born
on May 14, 1872, in ViUaverla,Italy. When he was five years
old, his mother died. He was
ordained on July 25, 1895, aft-
er studying at the Universityof Padua, where he earned a
doctorate.
We’re Ten Years OldThe Catholic Press has been described as a
chorus of powerful voices serving the word of
God. The Advocate became a member of that
chorus on Dec. 30. 1951. How appropriate, then,is the celebration of its tenth anniversary in this
Holy Season when we commemorate that most sa-
cred event when the Word of God "was made
Flesh and dwelt amongst us."
How powerful a voice The Advocate has been
in serving the word of God during this past dec-
ade we will have to leave to the judgment of
others. This we can say, that it has been written
and published by priests and lay people who are
dedicated to the service of the Word of God.
Front the very beginning The Advocate has
aimed toward a goal so well stated by Poue John
XXIII, "lo render good service to the word of God.
making it resound in all its beauty and newness,
without impoverishing it or altering il. but render-
ing it vital and attractive."
TRUE TO ITS commission given by its found-
er. Archbishop Walsh. The Advocate has been
privileged to serve the word and the Word. It has
faithfully recorded the words of the Vicars of
Christ and the words of their representatives
among us, our Bishops, It has instructed and in-
formed. It has reported on the Innumerable prob-lems posed by present-day lifeand has interpretedthem according to the criterion of eternal truth
which reflects upon time.
It is customary to receive gifts on one’s birth-
day. The Advocate would like to reverse the cus-
tom and bestow a few gifts upon those who are
responsible for its being.• To Archbishop Boland and Bishop McNulty
whose wholehearted support has been indispensa-ble.
• To the distinguished members of the ed-
itorial board whose scholarly and timely writingshave added distinction to the paper. We would
like to pay particular tribute to the board’s de-
ceased members; Msgr. William F. Lawlor, Msgr.
Joseph H. Brady and Msgr. John J. Tierney.
•To the dedicated men and women in the
various departments of the paper editorial,advertising, circulation and business. Their apos-tolatc bears much fruit. With mixed feelings we
extend congratulations to our first managing edi-
tor. Floyd Anderson, who soon will assume greaterresponsibilities directing a chain of Catholic news-
papers in The Register system.•To our printers and engravers whose great
pride in their work has contributed so much to
the typographical excellence of our paper. And to
Ihe mailmen who carry the 120,000 copies to yourhomes each week.
•To the priests and religious whose unfail-
ing support rates them a large share in anysuccess our paper has achieved. Special thanks are
due to those pastors who have adopted the Par-
ish Coverage Plan It is they who have widened
the field of our apostolate. May their number in-
crease.
•To the young Crusaders from our schools
who each fall, at the request of their Archbishop,campaign for new subscribers.
•To our advertisers who find in The Advo-
cate .1 profitable veltu le for the merchandising oftheir products.
•To Die hundreds of thousands of our read-
ers among whom we have tried to plant the seeds
of knowledge of and love for their Faith and their
Church.
AND SO ON THIS anniversary, we rededicate
ourselves to serve you through service to the word
of God. May the sentiments of Pope John to mem-
bers of the Catholic Press be your sentiment to-
ward us:
"All our children are equally dear to us. But
it is quite natural that we feel those most near to
us who make an open profession of fidelity to the
teachings of the Church and who support its
cause. Among these you occupy a place of the
first order."
Fr. Duffy, Elizabeth,Ordained at MiltonMILTON, Mass. Rev.
James R. Duffy, son of Mr.and Mrs. William Duffy, 325Vine St., Elizabeth, was or-
dained to the priesthood Dec.21 together with eight othermembers of St. Columban’sForeign Mission Society. Theywere ordained at St. Colum-ban’s Major Seminary here.
Father Duffy, born Sept. 17,1934, in Elizabeth, attendedSeton Hall Prep and Univer-sity until September, 1952,when he entered St. Colum-ban’s Seminary, lie finishedthe rest of his schooling atvarious Columban seminaries.
FATHER DUFFY will offerhis first low Mass at St.Mary’s Convent, Elizabeth.His first Solemn High Masswill be offered on Sunday,Dec. 31 at St. Mary’s Churchat noon.
Ministers of the Solemn HighMass will be: Rev. VincentMeFadden, St. Columban's,West Chester, Pa., assistantpriest; Rev. James O’Donnell.0.5.8., Dclbarton School,Morristown, deacon; Rev.Hugh A. O’Donnell, Our Lady
of the Visitation, Paramus,a cousin, subdeacon. VeryRev. Msgr. William F. Fur-long, paslor of St. Mary's,will preach the sermon.
A reception will be tenderedthe young priest at St. Mary’sschool hall from 4:30 to 7 p m.
After a short vacation withhis parents, Father Duffy willreturn to St. Columban’s Ma-jor Seminary to complete histheological studies. In June,1962, he will receive his mis-sion assignment. The Colum-ban Fathers engage in exten-sive mission work in Japan,Korea, Burma, the PhillippineIslands, the Fiji Islands and inLatin America.
Father Duffy
Pontiff PrayingFor Kennedy
VATICAN CITY (NC)—The
Holy Sec has sent a messageof condolence to PresidentKennedy on the illness of his
father, former U. S. Ambas-sador to Great Britain JosephP. Kennedy.
Cardinal Cicognani, PapalSecretary of State, assuredthe President that Pope John
was praying for Mr. Ken-
nedy’s recovery.
Gregory Club
Plans RetreatsORANGE Reservations
are being taken for the annual
men’s and women’s retreatsof the Gregory Club of the
Oranges on the weekend ofFeb. 23. Jan Hart Is chairmanof the women's retreat andArchie McAllister of themen’s.
The January schedule In-cludes a general meeting on
Jan. 5, at which an electionwill be held to fill two va-
cancies on the executive
board; an apologetics meetingon Jan. 12, at which Rev.Aleardo Deßerti, F.S.C.J., of
Montclair will speak; a win-ter weekend on Jan. 19 21 at
White Haven, Pa., an infor-mal night for stay-at-homeson Jan. 19; and a currentevents meeting on Jan. 28. atwhich Arthur Mohr will show
films and speak on the "Nutrl-Bio Story.”
All meetings will be held at
Graulich's here.
Archbishop’sAppointments
SUNDAY, JAN. 710 a.m., Communion
breakfast, Our Lady of Fa-tiraa Council, K. of C.,Newark, at St. FrancisXavier School.
Publisher Files
Against CalissiIn ‘Tropic’ Case
NEWARK Grove Press ofNew York City, publisher of’’Tropic of Cancer,” has filed•n amended complaint againstBergen County ProsecutorGuy Calissi and eight policechiefs, charging them withconfiscating paperback copiesof the book Without due pro-cess of law as provided in theU. S. Constitution.
The complaint was filedwith the U. S. District CourtClerk here by Jerome Eisen-berg of Newark, the publish-er’s attorney. Last month.Judge Reynier Wortendyketurned down an attempt byGrove Press to bring a fed-eral restraining order againstCalissi's seizure of the book.
The amended complaint alsoclaims (hat Calissi's searchwas illegal as it violated free-dom of press and freedom ofspeech. If successful, it wouldrequire Calissi to return theconfiscated copies and dropcourt action against the ven-dors.
Seven of the police chiefsnamed as co defendants arefrom Bergen County commun-lies. the eighth from MillburnIn Essex County.
U. S. Catholics
Prayfor PersecutedMCIFC News Service
Catholics throughout the na-
tion arc observing Dee. 31 as
a day of prayer for the per-secuted throughout the world.
The Administrative Board ofthe National Catholic WelfareConference at its Novembermeeting in Washington recom-
mended the day of prayer forthe Church of Silence and forimmigrants.
THE BISHOPS approved a
special prayer to be recited at
services in connection withthe observance. The text is:
“Lord Jesus Christ, Whochose to become an exile fromYour Heavenly Home that we,the exiled children of Eve,might not be banished foreverfrom Your Father’s Face;You Who as an infant in YourMother’s arms, fled into a
strange land to escape the ty-rant who sought Your life, we
beg You to look with compas-sion upon the multitudes of
men, women and children in
our own day who have beenforced by other tyrants ns
cruel as Herod to seek refugefar from their homelands.
“YOU WHO WERE rejectedby those You had come to
save, Who knew poverty and
privation throughout Your lifeon earth Who suffered mon-
strous injustice at the handsof Your enemies. Who endur-ed the abandonment and deso-lation of Your last hours on
the Cross, we beseech You to
open Your Wounded Heartand receive therein the mil-lions of Your own followersand friends whose faith in Youhas brought upon them theevils of oppression and ill-
treat ment in many forms anddegrees.
"You, Our Lord and Savior,Who died to give us the glor-ious freedom of the sons ofGod. comfort with divine hopeall those who are now depriv-ed of their human rights, theirliberty and security, theirhomes and families, above allthe opportunity to enjoy freelyand without fear the supremeblessings of their holy faith.
’’INSPIRE IN L'S who havenever suffered these greatmisfortunes an ever- increas-ing spirit of charity towardour persecuted brethrenthroughout the world, so that,out of our own spiritual re-
sources. our heritage of reli-gious and political freedom,our material substance, we
may do more and more tobrighten their night of exile,to lighten their burdens, tostrengthen them in patienthope until the day when, Godwilling and helping, they alsomay know again the joy ofthe peace that You brought tothis world."
Abbot Ondrak
Dies at 69CHICAGO Abbot Ambrose
L. Ondrak. 0.5.8.. of St. Pro-copius Abbey, Lisle. 111., diedin a hospital here Dec. 23 atthe age of 69.
Abbot Ondrak was a leaderin the movement to bring theEastern Orthodox back to un-ion with Rome. He was serv-
ing on the Pontifical TheologyCommission.
People in the News
Rev. Henri de Riedmatter,D.P., the Holy See's perma-
nent observer to the Intergov-
ernmental Committee for Eu-ropean Migration in Geneva,has received the gold medalPro Ecclcsia et Pontificc from
I’opc John.
Rev. Robert R. Kline, pres-ident of Ml. St. Mary’s Col-lege. Emmitsburg, Md., hasbeen named a domestic prel-ate with the title of RightReverend Monsignor.
Rev. Joseph A. McGuire,C.S.C., of Notre Dame, 90, theoldest priest in the Congrega-tion of the Holy Cross, has ob-served the 65th anniversary ofhis ordination.
Louis Ic Gros, first Minister
to the Holy See from Senegal,dias presented his credentialsto the Pope.
Brother Xavier O’Neill, 37,
Clarence, N. Y. is the first
native-born American to be-
come a provincial of theBrothers of Mercy.
Causes...
Brother Andrew Van HenBoer of the Congregation ofl lie Brothers of the MostBlessed Virgin Mary, Motherof Mercy. Born in the Nether-lands Nov. 24, 1841; died Aug.6. 1917. Sacred Congregationof Rites in Rome consideredintroduction of his beatifica-tion cause.
Rev. Jose Leone Torres ofArgentina, founder of the Sis-ters of Mercy of the ChildJesus. Born Mar. 19, 1849;died Dee. 15, 1930. Congrega-tion of Rites studied his writ-ings in beatification cause.
Rev. Giuseppe Baldo of Italy,founder of the Little Daugh-ters of St. Joseph. Born
Feb. 19. 1843; died Oct. 24,1915. Congregation of Ritesstudied writings in beatifica-tion cause.
Sister Anna Maria Maro-vich of Italy, co-founder of theSisters of Nazareth. BornFeb. 7. 1815; died Oct. 13,1887. Congregation of Ritesstudied writings in beatifica-tion cause.
Itisliops . . .
Most Rev. Eldon B. Schus-ter has been consecrated as a
Titular Bishop to serve as
Auxibary Bishop in GreatFalls, Mont.
Bishop-designate Charles A.Salatka will be consecrated toserve as the Auxibary Bishopof Grand Rapids, Mich., bythe Apostolic Delegate on
Mar. 6.
Died...
Bishop Emanuele Mignone ofArezzo, Italy. 97.
Future DatesFollowing is a list of im-
portant Catholic slates ami
meetings during January.
Jan. 1 Feast of the Cir-cumcision, holy day of obliga-tion.
Jan. 2-3 Mariologieal So-ciety of America, annualmeeting. New Orleans.
Jan. 18-25 Chair of UnityOctave (a period of prayer forChristian unity.
NEARLY 500 stations now
carry The Hour of the Cruci-fied, weekly radio program in-augurated in 1954 by the Pas-sionists.
They Said ‘Qua,’ Not ‘Hey ,’
To Jackie in South America
r i,
N£ W£RK ~ 11 sounllcfl fl'P the greetings called to Mrs.ZliV'i n°micdy on her recent visit to Bogota. Colombia. As-
in Snani ! rc ss quoted the crowd as shouting, .“Hey Beautiful,”in Spanish to the wife of the President of the United States.
® u ‘ thc Latins were not being flip; they have too much re-spect for women for that, says Rev. Martin R. Kelly. FatherKeU> is a priest of thc Newark Archdiocese serving as avolunteer missioner in Latin America with thc Society of St.James. He is back in thc States for a Christmas visit.
. FATHER KELLY went along with AP’s report that theColombians used the words "bonita” and “linda” in greetingMrs. Kennedy, and that they mean “pretty” or “beautiful.” Buthe says they prefaced these words with “Que” - not “Hev ”
as AI reported. And that’s a word of a different color.’
bcamiful'” ,h»,
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,
r W assurcs us’ ‘'llow PreAy!” or “How
nasselhi A
h , ° Latins were exclaiming as Jackie Kennedy
there u n r
° Im,ll I,l,nBua‘ Firs t Lady surely undorsloJthere was no disrespect in such greetings.
2 T II E ~A ttVOCATE December 28, 1!)01
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and llvnt ll'inhea to
TheAdvocateon your
10lh ANNIVERSARY!We ore proud lo be one of your oldest ond most
consistent advertisers.
May we take this opportunity to extend sincereNew Yeor Greetings to the readers ond staff of THE
ADVOCATE.
1. AMBROSINOPrmJtut
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JERSEY CITY
i Kiutfcf Nuiih of juurtt*) h*4uom
OVER A QUARTER CENTURY OF OFF-FREMISE CATERING
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Congratulates TheAdvocate
On It’s 10th Anniversary* ★ ★
1962 will be our 27th year in the off-premise Catering field. The first service we
rendered was for the Montclair Mounted Troop at the Montclair Riding Academy in
May 1935. This service was the birth of a continuous and progressive Catering Ser-vice which was located at Pals Cabin until 1945; it was then moved to MayfairFarms.
At Mayfair Farms adequate facilities were built and special appointments and
equipment were installed to take care of this specialized type of food service. Thesefacilities and appointments have been added to through the years until today we
maintain one of the finest establishments in this field.
We have had a vast experience and gained a great "Know-How" in the service ofall types and styles of Banquets, Wedding Receptions, Plant Opening Parties,Church Functions, Cocktail Parties, and Buffets, "with and without Candlelight." Suc-cess in this type of business is not an accident but attained only through the kindof an organization that has experience, trained personnel, proper equipment and
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May wo take this opportunity to extend our very best wishes to "The Advocate" on
its 10th Anniversary and our appreciation to our many friends for their patronage.
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Inter| Ctrftmits
Two Pontiffs, Ten Years, With the Universal ChurchBy Floyd Anderson
A decade is as a minute in the cen-turies of the Catholic Church; yet this pastdecade is a sparkling minute. We havebeen blessed with two Popes of outstand-ing character and ability yet complete-ly contrasting in their approaches to manyof the common problems of the Papacy.
Pius XII was a mountain of intellectual
energy, ceaselessly searching and probingfor means to bring about a peace in theworld —and yet there was no peace. In
many countries the Church and the peopleof the Church were prisoned and persecut-ed. beaten and buried, captured and con-trolled yet never conquered.
When Pope Pius XII died on Oct. 9,1958, at Castelgandolfo, after 19 brilliant
years as Supreme Pontiff, the world con-
jectured as to who the new Pope might be.Few indeed chose the name of AngeloCardinal Roncalli, 76, the Patriarch ofVenice. But the Cardinals did; and his
coronation took place in St. Peter’sBasilica on Nov. 4, 1958, 21 days beforehis 77th birthday.
IT WAS THE END of an era, and the
beginning of anew one.
Highlights and sidelights were a-plentyIn the lives of both Popes during the past10 years. Quickly to mind come the visita-tions of Pope John XXIII, who has left theconfines of the Vatican more in the pastthree years than other Popes had in the
past hundred. Bulking large in the historyof these future years will be the SecondVatican Ecumenical Council, which PopeJohn announced in January, 1959, a fewmonths after his coronation.
ONE UNENDING THEME throughoutthe decade, however, was persecution ofthe Church. The locale changed, but not
the pattern. At times, there was a loosen-
ing of the noose of communism; and thenagain it tightened, to serve the purposesof those who would rule the Church of
Christ, while they strove to conquer theworld to atheistic materialism.
One might cite an alphabetical litanyof countries and peoples who suffered un-der the tortures, at times refined but more
often arrogant and brutal, of the enemiesof Christianity.
Perhaps nowhere was this brutality,this arrogance toward world opinion,
shown more vividly and more patheticallythan during the Hungarian uprising in1956. The Hungarian people tried to castoff their chains; the Russians forged new
ones with their tanks and their armies—and the Hungarians were back in jail.
Cardinal Mindszcnty was freed for a fewglorious and then hazardous days as theRussians moved in —and then the Car-dinal moved into the U. S. Legation inBudapest and took refuge there. Andthere he still is, with communist secretpolice still waiting outside the legationdoors, all these five long years, in case
he stepped off the legation’s extrater-ritorial property.
During the decade, too, communismgot its firm foothold in the Western Hemis-phere, with many friendly Cubans turnedinto suspicious, spying agents of FidelCastro and his cohorts. But here, too, thepattern was the same the guidebookwas followed line by line, chapter bychapter. First, the declarations of friend-
ship and good government; then the grad-ual dissolution till, in the last months ofthe decade, came the open declaration ofcommunism. And even then, some were
surprised.
DURING 1952, the College of Cardinalshad been reduced to only 46, but in Novem-ber Pius XII named 24 new Cardinals,bringing the total to the full strength of70. But even this changed in the decade;in 1958 Pope John named 23, to make a
total of 78, and in 1960 he increased the
membership of the College of Cardinals to
86, an all-time high —and another
precedent set by the present Holy Father.
Actions closely affecting the laity werethose in regard to the fast before Com-munion and the Holy Week Liturgy. InJanuary, 1953, Pope Pius issued the Apos-tolic Constitution, “Christus Dominus,”which permitted the drinking of water anytime before receiving Holy Communion.He liberalized the Eucharistic fast in other
ways, and also granted faculties for even-
ing Masses.
Then, in March, 1957, Pius XII furthermodified the Eucharistic fast rules by de-
creeing a three-hour fast from solid foodand alcoholic beverages, and a one-hourfast from other liquids before reception ofHoly Communion. No more clock-watching■s the hour of midnight drew near! And
throughout the world it seemed that addi-tional millions approached the Communionrail regularly.
In November, 1955, a decree was is-
sued makirfg far-reaching changes in the
Holy Week liturgy; and in May that year,Pius XII proclaimed May 1 as the Feastof St. Joseph the Workman.
THE YEAR 1954 was a Marian Year,with many rallies and congresses held
throughout the world in tribute to Our
Lady. In October Pius XII established theFeast of the Queenship of Mary, to be ob-served on May 31.
That same year was marked by theserious illness of Pius XII in Februaryand again in December —and the Vaticanconfirmed months later that the Holy Fa-ther had had a vision of Christ during theDecember illness.
PIUS WAS 80 in 1956 —and during theyear he delivered exactly 80 addresses to
associations and conventions which calledon him at Rome and at his summer home,Castelgandolfo. Perhaps one of the marksof his pontificate in future years will bethe many talks he gave, each carefullytailored to his audience, and far-rangingin style and topic, lie talked, for instance,to rose growers, to bee keepers, to news-
men and nurses, lawyers and laborers,farmers and philosophers —and to each,in their own language, simple or technical,and with appropriateness and authority ofknowledge. The next year, when he was
81, he gave 98 speeches, setting anewrecord.
In February, 1958, Pius XII openedwith a special message the centenary ju-bilee of the apparitions of Our Lady to St.Bernadette at Lourdes; that year, too, the
Holy Sec was represented with an ex-hibit building at the World’s Fair in Brus-sels. And in 1958. after a three-day illness
Pope Pius XII died at Castelgandolfo on
Oct. 9 at 3:52 a.m.
PIUS XII HAD dedicated in a “most
special way" the Russian people to theImmaculate Heart of Mary (July, 1952);blessed the new North American Collegebuildings in Rome (October. 1953); raisedPius X, “the Pope of the Eucharist andthe modern Father of the Confraternity ofChristian Doctrine’’ to sainthood (May,1954); and St. Dominic Savio (June, 1954)and four others (June, 1954); inauguratedthe new Vatican radio station (October,1957); and in many encyclical letters andspeeches protested the constant persecu-tion of the Church in China and othercommunist-controlled countries.
One significant action of the decade
was the Holy See’s approval (May, 1956)of formation of the Latin American Bish-ops’ Council to coordinate and developChurch activities in Latin America.Focusing world (and North American) at-tention on the needs of the Church there,it began a world-wide effort to aid in solv-ing the problems of that continent.
AS 1961 ENDED, it was announcedthat the first ecumenical council since 1870would begin during 1962. Preparations hadgone ahead vigorously, encouraged by the
continuing and strong interest of PopeJohn XXIII.
The many facets of the new Holy Fa-ther’s charming, outgoing personality at-tracted the attention of the world —andhe had, in the words of the trade, a tre-
mendously “good press.” This aided him
immeasurably as he aimed at Christianunity —and historical first steps weretaken on Dec. 2, 1960, when Archbishop
Geoffrey Fisher of Canterbury visitedPope John the first time an Anglicanprimate had visited a Pope since theChurch of England’s break with Rome in
the 16th century. Almost a year later (Nov.15, 1962) Bishop Arthur Lichtenbcrger, Dr.Fisher’s counterpart in the U. S., paid a
similar visit. This aim was continued withthe Holy Father’s first encyclical (July,1959), which appealed to separated Chris-tians to reunite with the Catholic Church.
In March, 1960, Pope John named thefirst Negro, Filipino and Japanese Car-dinals, raising the College to a recordmembership of 85; and disclosed that hehad named three Cardinals secretly. InDecember, 1960, he added four more,bringing the College to an all-time highof 86.
IN THREE SHORT years, Pope Johnhad made a tremendous impression on theentire world, non-Catholic as well as Cath-
olic. They had seen pictures of him visit-
ing churches and hospitals, prisoners and
prelates, participating in processions, in a
complete break with past tradition. Hisvisitors included presidents and peasants,diplomats and day laborers, religious and
irreligious —and on all of them, he hadleft his own impression, as the Holy Fa-ther of all the people of the world.
Emerging nations and expanding pop-ulations presented the world with new
problems, but, as always, the Church wel-comed both with open arms. The HolyFather showed particular interest in thonew nations in Africa, saying in a 1960radio message, "Africa is a land pro-foundly religious and blessed by God.”
As the year drew to a close, Catholicsof the world totaled approximately 550million, a little more than 18% of theworld population. Ten years before, theCatholic population of the world had been
approximately 375 million.
Anniversary Special
DU R DECADE'S TWO POPES: When The Advocate began at the end of 1951, the Supreme Pontiff was the latePope Pius XII, shown in photo, left, on his 80th birthday, the year he delivered 80 talks to various groups likethese Catholic Actionists from Milan. As The Advocate reaches its 10-year mark, it records the actions of the new
Pontiff, Pope John XXIII, shown in photo, right, on one of his precedent-breaking visits beyond the Vatican—-this time to a hospice for aging priests, one of whom is whispering his greeting into the Pope’s ear.
Negro BaptistCalls on Pope
ROME (HNS) - Dr. J. 11.Jackson of Chicago, presidentof the National Baptist Con-vention, U.S.A., Inc., Ameri-ca’s largest Negro Churchbody, was received by PopeJohn XXIII in a private audi-
cnco here.
Dr. Jackson’s was the latestin a series of visits to the
Pope by leaders of non-Ho-man Churches. He was pre-ceded by Brooks Hays, former
president of the Southern Bap-tist Convention and a deputyspecial assistant to President
Kennedy.
The first of these historic
meetings took place last De-cember when Dr. GeoffreyFrancis Fisher, then Arch-
bishop of Canterbury, visited
Pope John. In November, Pre-
siding Bishop Arthur Lichtcn-
berger of the Protestant Epis-copal Church in the U. S. be-
came the first head of anAmerican Protestant denomi-nation to have a private audi-
ence with a reigning pontiffof the Roman Catholic Church.
BOOKS which avowedly at-tack religion or good morals
are among those proscribedby canon law.
December 28, 1961 TIIE ADVOCATE 3
1951 1961
Congratulations
The officers, directors and employees of Fidelity Union
Trust Company extend their sincere good wishes to The
Advocate on the occasion of your Tenth Anniversary.
As you mark the occasion with a review of the many
historical events that have taken place in your first
decade, we too look back at the many milestones and
now history made at Fidelity Union, and together look
forward to the many promises of the future.
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JEROME J. MARSH
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To say that any one company attained success on its
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In the case of Marsh's there is no doubt that one ofthese factors has been consistent advertising in The Advo-
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We are happy with the part The Advocate has playedin helping us to attain success, but we are happy too, that
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We look forward to many years of continued resultful
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Decade of American Catholic LifeBy Joseph R. Thomas
America was on the move in thelast decade. And the Church was on themove with it. although (or a while in
1960 it might have looked as if theChurch was wedded to the fortunes ofJohn F. Kennedy.
That is, it might have looked thatway to anoutsider. Actually the Churchstudiously avoided the political arena
as Mr. Kennedy became the first Catho-lic to successfully seek the presidency.
It can hardly be said that his elec-tion was the top Catholic story of thedecade Mr. Kennedy’s victory didn'trate a line of news space in The Advo-cate, although there was the usualeditorial comment that follows eachimportant election. But the campaignitself rates top-story distinction becauseof the Church-state clarifications soughtby sincere Protestants and because ofthe efforts of bigots to cast doubt on
Mr. Kennedy’s ability to uphold hisoath of office because of his "alle-giance" to Rome.
PROTESTANTS and Other Ameri-
cans United for Separation of Churchand State (POAU), which harrassedthe Church throughout the decade, firedthe first volley in 1958, even before Mr.
Kennedy had been nominated, when itsaid Catholic candidates for the presi-dency "should be scrutinized with parti-cular care.” Whereupon one of its topofficials quit in indignation.
And so it went for two years, withthe Church under even more fire thanMr. Kennedy. In retrospect it appearsthat the Church was the winner. Whileprofessional bigots arc still busy andunconvinced, thousands of skepticalProtestants have come to anew under-standing of Catholicism. Other thou-
sands, relieved to find that the WhiteHouse has not become an adjunct of theVatican, have laid aside their fears.
And the pace of inter-faith dialogue hasquickened.
STILL, THERE were cases inpolitical life where the voice of Catho-licism rather, the voice of individualCatholics speaking as citizens was
heard. Notable was the continuing op-position to U. S. recognition of RedChina and its admission to the UN.There was also the 1957 uproar pro-voked by the news that Yugoslavia’sMarshal Tito would be invited to visitthe U. S., an uproar that led Tito todecide to stay home.
Those expressions of opinion didnot constitute political intervention bythe Church. The verdict is not so clear,
however, on the action of the PuertoRican hierarchy in forbidding Catholicsto vote for the Popular DemocraticParty there and backing the ChristianAction Party in 1960. Coming in themidst of the presidential campaign, thiscaused a furor in which the underlyingcause the long-time refusal of Puer-to Rican politicians to recognize theCatholic character of the populationwas ignored by Mr. Kennedy’s antagon-ists.
PROTESTANT OPINION, of coursehas also had an effect on political de-cisions. In 1952 the hue and cry thatgreeted President Truman's naming of(len. Mark W. Clark as Ambassadorto the Vatican led the General to askthat his name be withdrawn. Anotherwas never submitted.
There have been other signs ofProtestant-Catholic tension, misunder-standing, and even bigotry such as thatcxniDitcd in Paul Blanshard's boo*,"American Freedom and CatholicPower." lie was ably answered in 1952in James M. O’Neill’s "Catholicism and’American Freedom."
Blanshard unsuccessfully demandedin 1953 that the State Department re-
voke the citizenship of Archbishop Ger-ald P. O’Hara when he was namedApostolic Nuncio to Ireland. The POAUand other groups continually sought toblock the granting of federal funds toCatholic hospitals. Catholic participa-tion in redevelopment projects, and theissuance of broadcasting licenses toCatholic institutions.
Education has been one of theprincipal areas of Protestant-Catholicconflict (for a complete review ofeducation, sec Page 6). Others havebeen the Catholic insistence on the im-morality of birth control and the ques-tion of censorship.
BIRTH CONTROL was ruled out as
a proper campaign issue by no less an
authority than President Eisenhower.But it became an issue anyway afterMr. Kennedy had first been singled outfor interrogation.
At issue was whether or not theU. S. should provide foreign aid forbirth control programs in underdevel-oped countries. In 1959 a presidentialadvisory committee clearly impliedthat we should, but up to now' no suchprogram has been adopted although itis understood that it is under study.
In 1953, some 50 Catholic agenciesin New York resigned from the city’sWelfare and Health Council after thecouncil voted to admit a planned par-enthood group. Catholic hospitals inSyracuse took similar action in 1958.
Two years later, theologians ruledthat it would be immoral for Catholicsto use a newly-developed birth controlpill. The pill had been tested in Catho-lic Puerto Rico, where in 1953 the Bish-ops were already speaking against ter-ritorial birth control policies.
There have been other gains andlosses in the controversy. In 1952 theNational Council of Catholic Men’suc-ceeded in having the government halt
the sale of contraceptives at militarypost exchanges. But in 1958 the NewYork City Board of Hospitals movedto permit the dissemination of birtlicontrol information and contraceptivesat city hospitals, and in 1959 the Penn-sylvania State Board of Public Assist-ance directed social workers to recom-mend birth control under certain cir-cumstances.
Currently birth control cases arc
before the courts in Connecticut andNew Jersey, the Connecticut case stem-ming from the U. S. Court’s refusal torule on the constitutionality of the statelaw prohibiting the giving of birth con-
trol information because up to thenthe law had never been enforced. Re-cent arrests now guarantee a test ofthe law.
THE FIGHT against obscenity hasbeen perennial, and despite* success insome areas the traffic in pornographyhas mushroomed into a $5OO million-a-year business. A series of state andcity movie censorship laws have beenstruck down by the U.S. Supreme Court,but in 1957 the court ruled that obscen-
ity is not entitled to the protection offree speech.
The difficulty, however, has comein defining obscenity for legal purposesand the result has been that citizens’
groups have come to the fore in theeffort to control the flow of smut. It waspublic indignation, for instance, whichled the comics industry to set up an
association to police its business in1954. By 1959 it could report successand increased sales.
Now the public is aroused over dirtymagazines, crime and violence on TV,an increase in Objectionable and con-demned movies and the trend toward"art” theaters.
Such American movie releases as
"French Line," "The Outlaw,” and"The Moon Is Blue” created controver-sy, with Cardinal Spellman of NewYork forbidding Catholics there to see
the latter picture. In aneffort to allowfor more adult movie fare, the Legionof Decency revised its rating system in1957, a year after the National Organ-ization for Decent Literature adopted a
new code. Neither move has appearedto have much effect in stemmingobscenity and in 1960 Citizens forDecent Literature, which started inOhio, became a national organization.
GENERALLY, though, the courts
and the legislators have not proved ir-religious, although the Supreme Courtin 1961 ruled that belief in God is not
* valid requirement for public office.Congress itself recognized the na-
tion’s religious heritage when in 1954 itadded the words "under God" to thePledge of Allegiance to the Flag. In1956 Congress adopted "In God WeTrust” as the national motto and in1957 that motto began appearing on thedollar bill.
This year found the U. S. SupremeCourt upholding the validity of statelaws limiting Sunday business activityin aneffort to provide for a community
day of rest. That this day of rest had a
religious significance, the court foundimmaterial. Its philosophy has beenthat if a law incidentally aids religionit does not make that law invalid. Onthat principle restrictive zoning laws,suits to remove chaplains from the fed-eral payroll and other nuisance legalactions have been thrown out of courtsthroughout the land.
THROUGHIT ALL one thing standsout the tremendous growth of theChurch. In the last decade the Catholicpopulation has risen by nearly 14 mil-lion to a total of 42 million. They areserved by 54,700 priests, an increaseof 11,000. Some 1,900 new schools havebeen built, 31 new colleges, and 90 new
hospitals. Infant baptisms annually totalmore than a million and 1.400 new par-ishes have been established, most of
them in suburbia as the Church followsits people.
During the decade, six Americanswere elevated to the Sacred College ofCardinals: Archbishops James F. Me-Intycr of Los Angeles. Richard J. Cush-
ing of Boston. John O'Hara of Phila-delphia, Aloisius J. Mucnch of Fargo,N. D., Albert G. Meyer of Chicago,and Joseph E. Ritter of St. Louis. Andone American, Samuel Cardinal Stritchof Chicago, became the first AmericanCardinal to be named to the RomanCuria when Pope Pius XII named himPro-Prefect of the Sacred Congregationfor the Propagation of the Faith; hewent to Rome in April, 1958. to take
up his duties, and on .May 26. he died.On Nov. 29, 1950, the National Shrine
of the Immaculate Conception in Wash-ington, I) C„ was drdieatrd. and hailed
AMERICA'S SHRINE: Dedication of the National Shrine of the Im-maculate Conception in Washington, D.C., was a high point of the past
decade for U. S. Catholics.
Advocate GoesHound World
Each week a neatly-wrap-ped copy of The Advocate isdeposited at a Chinese post of-fice in Hong Kong. In AddisAbaba. Ethiopia, a priestpicks up his copy to read thelatest news about the Churchin the world. A plane alightson the Fiji Islands in Hie Pa-cific The Advocate reachesanother destination.
THESE ARE only a few ofthe far-flung places on theglobe to which The Advocatetravels each week. It visitsevery continent, with the ex-
ception of Antarctica. It cross-es oceans and mountains be-fore it reaches the village inNyasaland or the city in In-dia. It goes to all 50 states. Itis delivered to priests and lay-men. Europeans and Africans,V.I.P.s and little-known peo-
ple.Perhaps at the same mo-
ment that you in North Jerseypick up your copy, a Vincen-tian priest in the PanamaCanal Zone and a Bishop inBritish West Africa havestarted to read theirs. Wheth-er it be Sydney, Australia, or
Lima, Peru; Carlow, Ireland
or Salisbury, Southern Rho-desia, The Advocate is there.
THE ADVOCATE reachesPope John at the Vatican andPresident Kennedy at theWhite House.
To the seminarians at theNorth American College inRome, it is a link with friendsand familiar places.
And readers write back to
express their appreciation.From Tanganyika. Rev. JohnMcGuire, a Maryknoll mis-sioncr originally from JerseyCity, expressed it this way:"It is my one contact with my
own diocese." Msgr. JustinoC. Ortiz of San Miguel. Phil-
lipine Islands, wrote: "Itkeeps inc in touch with events
in the States."
Missioners Seek
Radio WorkerCHICAGO A Franciscan-
o|>erated radio station in An-
apolis, Brazil, has appealedfor a radio technician willingto work as a Papal Volunteer.
The Franciscans have justacquired the station for edu-cational and religious pur-poses. The current technicianalso works at four other radiostations 'in the area and hasa private radio business
Papal Volunteers head-quarters arc located at 720North Rush St. here.
4 THE ADVOCATE December 28, 1961
(Continued on Page 5i
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by Pope Pius XII as a symbol of the“extraordinary piety” of AmericanCatholics.
THERE IS AMPLE evidence of agrowth in spirituality and social aware-ness among American Catholics. Wit-ness the new interest in the liturgicalmovement, sacred art and sacredmusic; (he decade-ions concern over
the problems of migratory labor; thegrowth of the family-life movement withits emphasis on family prayer; thegrowth of the lay apostlatc, and interestin racial justice.
New organizations have sprung upto meet these demands. Cana and otherfamily life groups enjoyed phenomenalgrowth. Guilds have been organizedamong professional people to bringChrist into the marketplace. Adult edu-cation programs and Serra Internation-al have flourished. The National Feder-ation of Sodalities was established in1957 and the National Catholic Social
Action Conference in 1958. A year later.Catholic interracial groups formed a
national organization.
LAY MISSION-SENDING societiessuch as Paterson’s Association for
International Development havesprung up and gained recognition fromthe Mission Secretariat in Washington.Many Catholic college graduates are de-
voting time to the home missions. TheSons of Mary, Help of the Sick, a reli-gious community, was founded in 1952
to send religious medical personnel to
the missions.
Much of the mission emphasis iscentered on Latin America. The Societyof St. James was established by Cardi-nal Cushing to recruit diocesan prieststo work in that area. A program to
recruit and train laymen for workthere was worked out by the Bishopsin 1960 in response to a plea from the
Holy Father. The Confraternity ofChristian Doctrine and the CatholicPress Association have instituted
co-
operative programs to assist the LatinAmerican Church.
CATHOLICS HAVE been in theforefront of the campaign for moreliberal immigration laws. They havebeen responsible for the emphasis on
the religious observance of Christmas.They have campaigned vigorously for(he proper observance of Sunday. Theyhave campaigned vigorously for theproper observance of Sunday. Theyhave led in the battle for inte-
gration in the South.
Unfortunately, not all have follow-ed the Church’s lead. Rev. Leonardhecney, S.J., and his followers wertexcommunicated in 1953 because oftheir strict interpretation of the doc-trine that “outside the Church there isno salvation." The New Orleans Arch-diocese had to dose a mission chapel,excommunicate certain Catholics andpostpone school integration because ofa scries of racial incidents. Many Cath-olics are in positions of leadership inright-wing extremist groups which haveblossomed in the last few years.
While such elements draw head-lines, they don't obscure the record ofCatholic concern for fellow man. Amer-ican Catholics have provided the mainfinancial support for the missions andPontifical relief programs. Their aidas channeled through Catholic ReliefServices-NCWC. sponsor of the U. S.Bishops' Thanksgiving Clothing Col-lection and the Bishops Relief FundDrive has been welcomed by theneedy in 67 lands. CRS has also ledin resettling refugees. Currently theChurch is doing all in its power forthose who have fled Cuba, just as ittjid for those who fled Hungary in 1956,wTien CRS resettled more than 17,000
of the 31.000 refugees who came tothese shores.
AN INDICATION of the scope ofthe problems of the Church in the pastdecade can be gained by a look at thesubjects dealt with by the Bishops intheir forceful annual statements: secu-larism (1952), the dignity of man andthe persecuted Church (1953), Godlessmaterialism (1954), the right to main-tain a private school system (1955)peace and unity (1956), censorship andtraffic safety (1957), segregation andthe right of the Church- to teach(1958), communism and the populationexplosion (1959), personal responsibility(1960) and the decline in morality(1961).
The decade was marred by tragedythe 1958 Chicago school fire that
claimed 98 lives; the martyrdom ofBishop Francis X. Ford, M.M., in Chinain 1952.
Death came to Rev. Daniel A. Lord,S.J. (1955); Rev. James M. GillisiC.S.P. (1957), Edward Cardinal Mooneyof Detroit (1958) as he was preparingto participate in the conclave thatelected Pope John; John Cardinal
O’Hara, C.S.C. (1960), and Msgr. Mat-thew Smith, founder of the Registersystem of newspapers (1960).
THERE WERE NEWSWORTHY
personalities Bishop Fulton J. Sheen,who became a national television figure;Dr. Bella V. Dodd, Communist Partyofficial who became a Catholic; AveryDulles, son of the late Secretary ofState, who was ordained a Jesuit in1956.
There were also Sen. Joseph Mc-Carthy, who became an object of con-
troversy in the Catholic press; Cardinal
Spellman, who initiated his Christmasvisits to servicemen in 1951; Arch-bishop (later Cardinal) Amleto Giovan-
ni Cicognani, who in 1958
rounded out 25 years as Apos-tolic Delegate; ArchbishopKgidio Vagnozzi, who becamehis successor.
There were Rev. PatrickPeyton, C.S.C., who criss-crossed the country and theworld promoting the FamilyRosary Crusade; ShirleyO’Neill, youthful Californianwho tried to rescue a shark-biten friend and then calmlybaptized him and led him inthe Act of Contrition as hedied.
Television
SUNDAY, DSC. SI
7 4 m <7> Chrlitophcrs. ‘‘Every*one ijn Play Part.” Ring Crovby.
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'Many Voices ”
1 Pm (7> Directions *62.230 pm <lll Insight.
SATURDAY, JAN. «
2pm <lll Christophers '’They'ra'our Schools.” Virgins Grey.
Radio
WNEW 1130. WNRC 600. WHOMMHO. writs 660. Won 710. WMCA
370. WWRL 1600. WVNJ 620. WBNX
1360. WA BC 770. WKHAFM 106.3.
WFUV-F.M 007. WROU-FM 893
SUNDAY. DKC. 31
613 a m WNEW Sacred Hear*.7 am. WNEW Hour of Crucified.713 am WNfIC- st. Francis Hour.7 10 a m WHOM Sacred Heart Hour.7.10
am. WOR .Marian Theatrr.
630 am WMCA Ave Marla Hour.630 am WWRU—Ave Marta Hour.
910 am WVNJ Living Rosary.Rev John M Vaccaro.
10 10 a m WFIIA FM “Our Spirit-ual Mother” drama. Mary Pro-
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12 43 pm WFUVFM Sacred Heart.1 pm WFCV <FM> Ave Mana.
2-io pm WNBC Catholic Hour."New Year's K*e Measage.** Magr.John J. Douahetrv
3 pm. WFLV iFM»—Ate MarlaHour.
6pm WFCV* <FM» Hour of Cruel-
lied “Journey Through skies,” Rev.FidrliS Itlre. C I*
6 pm WIINX M Jude Novena.
7 pm W W 111.1, Hall Mary Hour.7 43 pm WBNX Novrna
If pm WAHC- <*hrt»tun In Action
Rev r X Dolan. SJ. RonaldHeck.
MONDAY. JAN. 1
2 pm WKOU d'Mi - Sarrrd Heart.7 U pm WIINX Novena.
TUISDAV. JAN. 2
2 pm WMil *F3l»—sacred Heart.
743 pm WIINX - Novena991 pm
W HOI? IFM» George-town University Forum.1000 pm WS«U*FM» Christophers.
WKDNISOAY. JAN. 3
2 pm WKOU iFM»- Sacred Heart.THURSDAY. JAN. 4
3 pm WKOU *FM»—Sacred Heart.
3 p m WW)U *FM» Window onCatholic World
9 30 pm. WKOU »FM» Ave Marta.FRIOAY. JAN. S
2 pm. WKOU *FM>—Sacred Heart.R pm WIINX Novena.9 to pm WKOU <FM* Hour ofCrucified.
ic»tt3 pm WKOU <FM» Hour ofRl Francis.
Five Years to Make
Map of Holy LandBUFFALO (NO High
praise was given here to a
cardboard, contour map of the
Holy Land that a French Ca.
nudian priest spent five years
in making.The map. made by Rev.
Raymond Melanson, C.J.M.,teacher of Sacred Scripture at
Holy Heart Seminary, Halifax,N. S , depicts in detail the HolyLand of Christ's time.
About 30 plastic replicas of
the cight-by-four.foot maphave been made.
NEWARK’S CATHEDRAL: Workmen were complet-ing Sacred Heart Cathedral when this photo was madeof the Archbishop's throne overhung by one of the
lighting fixtures. It was April, 1954.
How theChurch Grew in the U.S.(Continued from Page 4)
December 28, 1961 THE ADVOCATE 5
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Schools Set the Scene for Big Stories of the DecadeIf all the words spoken
about education in the U. S.In the last decade were strungend to end Into space therewould be no question as towho would be first on themoon.
No one topic has spannedthe years since the establish-ment of The Advocate as haseducation. The decade openedwith Catholic schools on thedefensive, progressed through
a period of self-appraisal andended with Catholics assertingtheir right to a share of thetax dollar which now goes ex-
clusively to public education.As 1951 gave way to 1952,
Catholics were aroused by a
charge by James B. Conant,president of Harvard, that
non-public schools are "divi-alve.”
But when the first Russian
Sputnik broke the bounds ofearth In 1957, the debate was
forgotten as educators pub-lic and non-public began to
reappraise their methods andgoals.
As side Issues, Catholicvoices warned against a re-action which would subjugatethe humanities and debated
among themselves whetherCatholic education, particular-ly on the college level, was
falling to provide its share ofleaders.
ONE RESULT of the con-
cern was passage of the 1958National Defense Education
Act, greeted with mixed feel-
ings by the Catholic commu-
nity.On the one hand was the
recognition extended to theCatholic school system; on
the other was the system’srelegation to a secondary po-sition by some of the law’s
provisions.The national concern about
an educational lag also speed-ed the day when the federalgovernment would seriouslyconsider the oft-repeated re-
quests of public school educa-tors for government assist-
ance.
That day arrived in 1961when the Kennedy Administra-tion proposed a program ofaid to public schools only,holding that aid to privateschools would be unconstitu-tional.
Catholic spokesmen bitterlyopposed the plan as a viola-
tion of basic justice and the
opposition was credited with
forestalling Congressional ac-
tion. Now Catholics are gird-ing themselves for an effort to
educate their fellow citizens
to the justice of their demandsfor equal treatment so thatwhen the question is dobatedagain, probably In 1963, their
contributions will bo recogniz-ed.
THOSE CONTRIBUTIONS
aro considerable. The Church
now maintains 267 collegesand 13,027 high schools and
grammar schools. It faces the
same expansion problemswhich led public school educa-
tors to press for federal funds.
The past decade has seen
Catholics add 1.868 schoolsand 31 colleges to their educa-tional system as college en-rollment rose by 85,400 to a
total of 322,000 and primaryand secondary school enroll-ment rose by 2,100.000 to atotal of 5,289,000.
Catholic educators have pre-dicted that an equal growthwill be necessary In the yearsahead to keep abreast of popu-lation growth. Expansion,however, has created another
problem because religious vo-
cations have not kept pace. In10 years, for instance, mem-
bership in Sisterhoods andBrotherhoods has increased byonly 21,000.
CATHOLIC SCHOOLS havehad to turn to lay teachers,and their number has more
than tripled, jumping from
15.300 to 52.900. While theirsacrifices rate as one of the
greatest untold stories of the
decade, their minimum finan-cial needs are still so much
higher than those of religiousthat the trend has added con-
siderably to the cost of oper-ating Catholic schools.
This cost squeere has led to
a new debate regarding the
advisability of dropping cer-
tain grades and If so where:
on the high school or the
grammar school level.
ABIDE FROM THESE ma-
jor problems, there are fringeIssues, many of which are be-
ing fought in the courts onChurch-State grounds.
Among these would he re-
leased-time programs for reli-gious Instruction, school bus
transportation, restrictive zon-ing legislation and the recita-tion of prayers in publicschools. Generally, the courtshave upheld the religiousview, although in a restrictedsense.
Thus in 1952 the U. S. Su-preme Court ruled that re-lcased-tlme programs did notviolate the Constitution. Thequalifier, however, was that
• such instruction must be givenoff public school premises.
While such programs are le-
gal, they are by no means uni-versal. In some cases, statecourts have held such pro-grams to be in violation ofstate laws. In others, localhoards of education have re-fused permission for relcased-time programs.
THE SAME is true of schoolbus laws. Although the U. S.Supreme Court has ruled that
transportation may be provid-ed for parochial school pupils,many states forbid the prac-tice as being in violation ofstate constitutions or limit itto existing public schoolroutes.
In the last decade, school
bus laws and practices have
been upset in Missouri and
Pennsylvania. The Maine Leg-islature killed then passed a
school bus bill. But the courts
have upheld the bus laws
adopted in Alaska, Massa-chusetts and Connecticut,among other areas.
From the Catholic viewpoint,the most progressive de-
velopment was the passage in1960 of a bill making trans-
portation of ail students inNew York mandatory undercertain conditions. New York,however, has taken the leadin liberal education policiesand last year provided a pro-gram of sliding state aid for
all college students. New Jer-
sey’s own college scholarshiplaw, adopted in 1960, was pat-
terned on a law passed earli-
er in New York.
THE U. S. SUPREME
Court in 1952 upheld a New
Jersey law permitting the dailyrecitation of the Lord’s Prayerand a Bible reading in publicschools. The court has also up-held the right of a private in-
stitution to take part in an ur-
ban renewal program, givingits ruling in 1957 in favor ofFordham University and thus
paving the way for campus
expansion projects planned hySt. Louis and Seton Hall uni-
versities, among others.
Restrictive municipal zoningordinances have been thrownout by courts in New Jersey,California, New York, Penn-
sylvania and elsewhere."Churches and schools are
more important than local
taxes," said a New York court
in upholding the plans of theRochester Diocese to build a
church and a school in a resi-dential area.
RELIGIOUS SYMBOLISM
has also been a bone of con-
tention. But the Kentucky Su-preme Court ruled in 1954 thatwhere Sisters are employed as
public school teachers they
may wear their religious hah-
it. State officials in Ohio in1958 also upheld that right.But in Colorado, state funds
were withheld from schools
permitting the practice.
Throughout the land there
has been a movement by sec-
ularists to curtail religiously-oriented displays and assem-
bly programs centered aroundsuch holidays as Christmas,Easter and llannukah. Therehas been no overall ruling on
such practices in the publicschools.
In most locations theyare governed by local whim,although New Jersey officials
have ruled the practices per-
missable within certain limits.
NEW JERSEY has also up-held the right of Jersey Cityto enter into an agreementwith Seton Hall University for
the lease of public premisesfor a medical school. Sevensuits attacking the agreementhave failed and the case drew
national attention in the latter
part of the decade.
Despite such rulings, Catho-
lics still are faced with a bat-
tle to win equal recognition for
their schools. The problems ofeducation in a pluralistic so-
ciety will span the next dec-
ade as they have the last.- J.R.T.
Anniversary Special
Scalera Elected
Setonian Editor
SOUTH ORANGE—NicholasR. Scalera of Newark hasbeen elected editor-in-chief ofthe Setonian, the undergradu-ate newspaper of Seton Hall
University,Scalera is a social studies
major at Seton Hall and isalso sergeant-at-arms of theCenter of Italian Culture, jun-ior class representative to thestudent council and memberof the Knights of Setoma, theSt. Thomas More Pre-LegalSociety, the Booster Club and
Phi Beta Sigma, honoraryservice fraternity.
THE ADVOCATE6 December 28, 1961
GRIFFITHSNew Jersey’s Great Piano and Organ House
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St. Margaret's Flans to Build
New Church, Convent, RectoryLITTLE FERRY—A ground-
breaking ceremony for thenew church, rectory and con-vent at St. Margaret's parishhere will be held on Jan. 7 at3 p.m. with Msgr. James F.
Looney, Chancellor, officiat-
ing.Plans for the three buildings
were released this week byRev. Charles A. Bell, pastor.The architect is Gerard Jo-
seph Oakley of Bergenfield.Bids will he received shortly
after the groundbreaking cere-
mony and completion dateshave been set for the conventin September, 1962, for the
rectory, October, and the
church, December.
THE CHURCH will be ofmodern design, accommodat-
ing 800, and will be erected
on property to the rear of the
existing rectory, facing Cham-berlain Ave. It will be fan-
shaped and will feature a low
silhouette, conforming to thepresent school building, domi-nated by a 70-foot natural red-wood and brick bell tower.
Sawtooth-like walls willhave cathedral glass windowsfocusing the light forward to
the main altar and sanctuary.The functional fan shape ofthe church will facilitate con-
venient seating and will lenditself to a devotional atmos-phere with all lines directedtoward the altar and sanctu-
ary.Plans call for a choir loft
accommodating 50 choristers,with the organ from the pres-
ent church being relocatedand improved in order to
meet the demands of the larg-er area of the new church. Alarge baptistry with a glassenclosed cry-room will allowparents to assist at Mass with-out having the children dis-turb others.
A DOME-LIKE clerestorywindowed roof over the sanc-
tuary will add height to thatpart of the church structure,at the same time allowingproper lighting to come intothe sanctuary area throughcolored cathedral glass pan-els.
The exterior of the churchwill be of norman face brickto match the school with
highlights of limestone, alum-inum trim and natural finishredwood with cathedral glassinserts. A large stained-glasswindow of St. Margaret willbe located directly over theentrance to the church. Shel-tered canopies and walkwayswill also be provided for theconvenience of parishionersduring Inclement weather con-
ditions.
THE RECTORY, also facing
Chamberlain Ave., will beconnected to the church by a
building containing the boiler
room and a community workroom for parish societies.
The rectory itself will be a
two-story structure, with liv-
ing quarters for the pastor,two assistants, housekeeperand visiting priest. Three of-fices will be located on thelower floor. The building willbe of wood frame, brick ven-
eer, with fire-rated plaster fin-ishes.
THE CONVENT will face
Washington Ave. and will be
erected on land now occupiedby the parish garagps. Thesewill be torn down as anew
garage and storage room has
already been provided throughconversion (by men of the
parish) of an existing build-
ing.The convent will be a two-
story, wood frame, brick ven-
eer building with rooms for
eight Sisters and provision forexpansion to house 10. Therewill be a chapel on the firstfloor, the usual communityrooms and a prayer gardenwill be part of the exteriorplan.
In recent years, parishion-ers have attended Mass in theschool hall, as the old churchhas proved inadequate. Thelatter will be retained as a
meeting hall. The present rec-
tory will he torn down to
make room for parking lotsand the present convent willbe sold.
FATHER BELL has invitedall parishioners, as well as
clergy and civic officials ofthe area to attend the ground-breaking ceremony. It will beconcluded with Benediction, tobe celebrated in the school
building.
IN LITTLE FERRY: The architect’s conception of the new church and rectoryfor St. Margaret’s parish, Little Ferry, is shown above. At left is the two-story rec-tory, connected to the church by a structure which will house the parish meetingroom. The church, with its 70-foot redwood and brick tower, is at right. Architect
is Gerard Joseph Oakley of Bergenfield.
Holy Name Notes
Archdiocesan Convention
In Jersey City Apr. 29NEWARK The Newark
Archdiocesan Federation ofHoly Name Societies, at itsDecember meeting, initiatedplans for the annual conven-tion to be held at St. Pat-
rick’s, Jersey City, on Apr. 29,1962.
Hugh Connell, member of theState Co-Ordinating Commit-tee, reports that plans are un-
der way for the second stateconvention to be held in As-bury Park Oct. 19-21.
The federation voted to senda letter of commendation to
Prosecutor Lawrence A. Whip-ple of Hudson County and hisstaff for their continued driveagainst obscene literature inthat area.
Hudson County Federation—Thomas J. Fleming, author of"All Good Men," a novel
based on Jersey City politicallife, will be guest speaker atthe Jan. 25 semi-annual din-ner meeting of the Hudson
County Holy Name Public Re-lations clinic at the Falrmount
Hotel. He will speakJrish-Amcrican Looks at the
Irish.” based party on a recent
tour he made of Ireland.
St. Cecilia's, Kearny—JohnBurns was elected president at
the December meeting, withPatrick Reilly, Thomas Mc-Farland and Oswald Toweychosen for other offices.
K. of C.
East Orange Council Atestimonial dinner to PastGrand Knight RaymondPearsall was held recently at
the Rock Spring Corral Inn.The guest speaker was Msgr.Vincent P. Coburn, officlaliaof the Newark Archdiocese.Co-chairmen were Manlio J.Polci and James J. Blessing.
NEARLY 10.000 organiza-tions are affiliated with theNational Council of CatholicMen.
December 28, 1961 Til E AD V OCATE 7
HIGHERDIVIDENDS
NOW
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anticipated
COMPOUNDED
QUARTERLY
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On the Occasion
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The Church in North Jersey: ExpansionBy Ed Grant
NEWARK - If one word can he made to symbolize the pastdecade in the Archdiocese of Newark and Diocese of Patersonit would be: growth.
V UB* * <lccadc of building, a decade of new parishescreated (38 of them) new schools and churches erected of an in-crease of over 400,000 in the number of Catholics living in the•even counties of North Jersey served by The Advocate
The bare statistics of the growth arc shown in the accompany-Ing table, taken from the 1951 and 19G1 editions of The OfficialCatholic Directory. They tell their own story in simple directterms. And more of this story of growth will he found' in thespecial feature on new buildings found elsewhere in this issue.
IT HAS ALSO BEEN a decade of change, which can per-haps best be symbolized by giving the titles and positions ofsome members of the clergy as they were 10 years ago and as
they are today:• (1951) Bishop Thomas A. Boland of Paterson; (1961) Arch-
bishop Boland of Newark;* < 1951> Bish °P Jam” A. McNulty, Auxiliary Bishop of
Newark; (1961) Bishop McNulty of Paterson;• (1951) Msgr. Martin W. Stanton, pastor of St. James,
Newark; (1961) Bishop Stanton, Auxiliary Bishop of Newark;• (1951) Rev. Walter W. Curtis, sacristan and professor at
Immaculate Conception Seminary, Darlington; (1961) BishopCurtis of Bridgeport, Conn.;
• (1951) Rev. George W. Shea, professor, Immaculate Con-ception Seminary, Darlington; (1961) Msgr. Shea, rector, Im-maculate Conception Seminary;
• (1951) Rev. John J. Dougherty, professor, ImmaculateConception Seminary; (1961) Msgr. Dougherty, president, SetonHall University.
THERE HAVE ALSO been changes accompanied by a senseof loss. The death of Archbishop Thomas J. Walsh on June 6,1932. ended 24 years of service during which the Diocese ofark had become the Archdiocese of Newark. On Nov. 19 thatyear Archbishop Boland was named to fill the vacancy and, on
Apr. 15, 1953, Bishop McNulty became Bishop of Paterson.The year 1953 was also noted by the beginning of the cen-
tennial celebration of the creation of Newark as a diocese. Itwas climaxed on Oct. 19, 1954, with the formal opening of SacredHeart Cathedral and the presentation of the pallium, symbol ofhis authority as metropolitan of the Province of Newark, to
Archbishop Boland.
ArcE®En
A TH,
0F Archbishop Walsh, the installations ofArchbishop Boland and Bishop McNulty and the opening of
de
a
c
C
a
r
d
d
e.Ot£sC Sh
e:
dral "* * this
<hnTn
e Archdiocesan Development Campaign in Newarkand the Diocesan Development Fund in Paterson-
<JiiJ’MSS?"s'",n"a" “**•
(3) The successful campaigns against Sunday sales and for
role
C scholarsh,p law- in which Tl, e Advocate took a leading
IN JUNE, 1955, Bishop McNulty announced that three newhigh schools would be erected in the outlying sections of thePaterson Diocese. Their locations in Sparta. Wayne and Dcn-ville were announced the following May and. in March, 1957, theBishop established the Diocesan Development Fund to sunnortthese institutions. F
School development during the decade was swift in bothNorth Jersey Secs. The pattern for new parishes was to builda school first, a church later. Older parishes which had neverhad a grammar school sported brand new ones, others broughtexisting facilities up to date. The Newark Archdiocese added61 grade schools in 10 years. And new high schools sprung up in
Bayonne, Jersey City, Oradcll, Newark and East Orange.The period has also seen changes in the archdiocesan school
system. Msgr. William F. Lawlor, for over 30 years superintend-ent of schools, died in 1959. Archbishop Boland appointed Msgr.Joseph P. Tuitc as his successor and also named three assistantsuperintendents. A single admission test was established for allschools in the archdiocese in 1960.
IN DECEMBER that year. Archbishop Boland announcedthe Archdiocesan Development Fund, a $3O million drive for fundswhich would build eight new high schools, as well as anew phil-osophy building at Immaculate Conception Seminary and fourhomes for the aged. The campaign was successful and studentsare already attending two of the new schools, with another dueto open next September.
Also on the educational front, Archbishop Boland establishedin 1959 the department of special education, implemented by theMt. Carmel Guild, and integrated with the archdioccsan schoolsystem. The Mt. Carmel Guild's departments for the deaf andblind were also expanded, and its new center in Newark wasblessed in 1955. St. Philip Ncri school in Newark became the
headquarters for the teaching of “exceptional” children in 1960.
SETON HALL reached many milestones during the decade.The two major ones—one bright, one dark—were inextricablylinked. With the approval of Archbishop Boland. Msgr. John L.McNulty undertook the creation of New Jersey’s first medical-dental school in facilities leased from the Jersey City Medical( enter. Through his untiring efforts, and despite wearisome liti-gation, the school opened in September, 1956; won its final courtvictory in January, 1957, and graduated its first class in June,1960. But Msgr. McNulty was not on hand for this happy dayhe died suddenly on retreat at Immaculate Conception Sem-inary on May 27, 1959.
The medical school was not the only project tackled bySeton Hall in these years. Along with St. Michael** Hospital, itis involved in the redevelopment of downtown Newark, The hos-pital plans an entirely new medical center near its site;the university, a downtown campus. In addition, Scion Ilall open-ed its Paterson division in 1954, closed its Jersey City divisionin 1961 and also announced plans for a rural division in SaddleRiver and bought property there for that purpose.
THE ADVOCATE PLAYED its own role in helping to shape,as well as report the news in its first io years. Several cam-paigns were undertaken, but the major one was against the prac-tice of Sunday shopping. The campaign was opened in Novem-ber. 1955, and was crowned with partjal success four years laterwhen 12 New Jersey counties, including six in North Jersey, ap-proved a law which greatly limited the sales. There were alsosuccessful campaigns against burlesque in Newark and Union(ity, and against a petition for euthanasia signed by over 100New Jersey physicians, which resulted in many of the doctorsdemanding retractions from the Euthanasia Society for usingtheir names. During the 10 years, the paper was cited as a
’ newspaper of distinction" by the Catholic Press Association andwon awards for its human interest features and its Sunday salescampaign.
Archdiocesan and diocesan organizations grew, proliferatedand were revitalized during the decade. In 1955, the men’sand women's organizations of the Archdiocese of Newark wereaffiliated with National Councils of Catholic Men and Women and.in 1956, the first provincial meeting of Scrra International was
held in East Orange. Paterson formed its diocesan educationalcouncil in 1955; the Legion of Mary formed a Newark curia In
1957; Bishop McNulty welcomed the Association for InternationalDevelopment to Paterson the same year; a Late Vocational So-
Anniversary Special
Maryknoll Nantes
Superior in JapanTOKYO (RNS)-Rcv. Clar-
ence J. Witte. M.M., has beenappointed regional superior ofthe Maryknoll Fathers in Ja-
pan to succeed Rev. WilliamF. Phcur, M.M. lie will takeoffice on Jan. 1.
Father Witte has been serv-
ing as a member of the Su-perior General’s Council at the
Maryknoll motherhouse inMaryknoll, New York.
ST. ANNE is the patron saintof women in labor.
German Priests
Leaving PolandBERI IN (RNS Since
early December, numerous
German Catholic and Protes-tant clergymen have been ar-
riving in West Germany fromformer German territoriesnow under Polish communistadministration. Most of them
are from Upper Silesia.
The clergymen reported thatPolish officials had in-,terviewed them. asking,among other things, whetherthey fell themselves to bePoles or Germans. If theysaid they wanted to be known
as Germans, permission wasgiven within a few days to
leave Poland and take theirbelongings with them.
Previously, German priestsand pastors anxious to leavethe annexed territories havehad to wait several years for
permission to leave for theirhomeland.
Decade of GrowthIhe Newark Archdiocese is designated by (N);
the Paterson Diocese by (P).
1951 1961Catholics 1,072,598 (N) 1,451,702 (N)_
. 157,639 (P) ’236,389 (P)Priests 865 (N) 1,165 (N)
’ 260 (P) 332 (P)Slsters
_
2,095 (N) 3,317 (N)1,311 (P) 1,366 (P)
Brothers 72 (N) 125 (N)
n . .
95 (P) 87 (P)Parishes 210 (N) 240 (N)
_
77 (P) 85 (P)Grammar Schools 166 (N) 227 (N)
45 (P) 64 (P)Sluden ts 77,973 (N) 127,832 (N)
10,827 (P)- 25,416 (P)High Schools 48 (N) 52 (N)
12 (P) 15 (P)Students 11,675 (N) 21,956 (N)
2,180 (N) 4,857 (P)College Students 9,326 (N) 13,182 (N)
611 (P) 2,091 (P)CCD Students 45,842 (N) 108,148 (N)
11,115 (P) 21,812 (P)
8 THE ADVOCATE December 28, 1961
(Continued on Page 9)
cflYEARS OF PROGRESS
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THE CHURCH, while it lives in the present and plans forthe future, also takes its fond looks at the past. Anniversarycelebrations studded the decade, led, of course, by the arch-diocesan centennial itself. Seton Hall celebrated its 100th anni-versary in 1955-56, the Sisters of Charity of St. Elizabeth in1958-59, and Immaculate Conception Seminary began its cen-
tennial celebration on Dec. 8 this year.1 he Passionists had two 100th anniversaries to observe: their
arrival in the United States in 1852 and their first establishmentin North Jersey in 1861. The Dominican Sisters of the PerpetualRosary observed their 75th anniversary in 1955 and the FelicianSisters their 100th anniversary the same year. And countless wereSisters their 100th anniversary the same year.
HUNDREDS OF DEVOTED priests, Sisters and Brothersdied during these 10 years, several on foreign soil where theyhad spent their lives in mission work. In addition to ArchbishopWalsh, Msgr. McNulty and Msgr. Lawlor, the necrology includ-ed Msgr. John C. McClary, Vicar General of the Archdiocese ofNewark, and Mother Mary Bcnita, Superior General of theSisters of Charity of St. Elizabeth, 1952; Msgr. John J. Dauen-hauer, Vicar General of the Diocese of Paterson, 1954; MotherAquinas, 0.P., Superior General of the Dominican Sisters of
Caldwell, 1957; Bishop Justin J. McCarthy of Camden, 1959-Msgr. James J. Carberry, Vice Chancellor of the Archdiocese ofNewark, 1960; and Msgr. Joseph H. Brady, rector of ImmaculateConception Seminary, 1961.
The death of Bishop McCarthy was especially poignant. Hewas rector of Immaculate Conception Seminary at the time ofThe Advocate’s foundation. In 1954, he was consecrated as
Auxiliary Bishop of Newark and, in 1957, was installed as Bishopof Camden, following the death of Bishop Bartholomew Eustacoin 1956. Bishop McCarthy suffered a heart attack just after hisinstallation hut recovered to serve his diocese until a secondand fatal attack on Dec. 26, 1959, at Benedictine Academy, Eliz-abeth, where he was vesting for Mass.
THREE TIMES IN the 10 years, fire destroyed churcheswithin the Archdiocese of Newark. St. Bridget’s, Newark, burneddown in July, 1953; Assumption Ukrainian, Bayonne, and Queenof Angels, Newark, in 1958.
Fire also ravaged a building at St. Joseph’s Home forBoys, Englewood Cliffs, in 1953, but this one had a happy end-ing. as, two years later, ground was broken for St. Joseph’sVillage, Rockleigh, which opened in 1957 to house children for-merly scattered through three institutions.
HONORS CAME to Catholics of the North Jersey area, bothclergy and laity, from many directions. Chief of course was theelevation to the hierarchy of four priests from the area: the latoBishop McCarthy, Bishop Stanton, Bishop Curtis and BishopThomas Manning, 0.F.M., who served several years at St. Bon-aventure Monastery and High School, Paterson, before beingnamed Bishop of a Bolivian prelature in 1959. The double con-
secration of Bishops Stanton and Curtis Sept. 24, 1957, markeda first in the history of the Newark Archdiocese.
Over 200 members of the clergy and the laity received Papalhonors during the decade, most of these honors being bestowedby Pope Pius XII in 1954 and 1958 and by Pope John XXIII in1959. Bishop McNulty was named to one of the committees forthe second Vatican council, as were several priest-theologians.Rev. Achille Rondinari, C.R.M., pastor of St. Joseph’s, Lodi, was
called to Rome to serve as administrator general of the Carac-ciolini Fathers in 1956; Msgr. Dougherty was appointed to thePontifical Commission for movies, radio and television in 1956:and Rev. Reginald Arliss, C.P., of East Orange, was appointedfirst rector of the new Philippines Pontifical College in Romelast August.
Two priests of the Archdiocese of Newark have served atthe Apostolic Delegation in Washington, D.C., during these 10
years. Msgr. John J. Cain was there from 1952 to 1961 and Rev.Harold D’Arcy went there in February this year.
ON A NATIONAL LEVEL, too, honors have poured in. Bish-op McNulty has served as moderator of the National Federationof Catholic College Students since 1953; John D. Carroll was
elected president of the International Catholic Deaf Associa-tion in 1955; Archbishop Boland accepted the chaplaincy of theAncient Order of Hibernians in 1958 when Jeremiah J. O'Callag-han of Jersey City was elected president and Rev. John T.Lawlor, deputy chaplain; Rev. William Daly of Seton Hall Prepbecame national chaplain of the Newman Alumni Associationin 1959; and Rev. Charles Callahan of Irvington was namedpresident of the Conference of National Diocesan Sodality Direc-tors and director of the National Federation of Sodalities of OurLady in 1961. In 1956 Mrs. Ernest P. Tibbitis, now of East Or-ange, was named president of the International Federation ofCatholic Alumnae.
The present year has seen North Jersey laymen rise to toppositions in three organizations. William Johnson of Wayne was
elected president of the National Council of Catholic Men; GeorgeSmith of Bloomfield, president of Serra International; andAlbert Schwind of Clifton, national commander of the CatholicWar Veterans. Msgr. Aloysius S. Carney of St. Rose of Lima,Newark, became national chaplain of the CWV. James Lamb ofRiver Edge was named director of the Association for Inter-national Development.
Twice during the decade, the Newark Archdiocese was hostto international Catholic congresses. In 1953, the Blue Armyheld a congress at St. Mary’s. Plainfield. Then, in 1959, theWorld Sodality Congress came to Seton Hall University.
THE RELIGIOUS ORDERS of the area have also seenchanges. A major one came in August. 1956, when St. Mary’sAbbey was transferred from Newark to Morristown. However,both Benedictine Abbots of North Jersey. Abbot Patrick O'Brien,of St. Mary’s, and Abbot Charles Coriston of St. Paul’s Abbey]Newton, are in the positions they held 10 years ago.
It has not been the same in other orders and congregationscentered here. Heading the new appointments was the electionof Mother Ninetta lonata, M.P.F., as Superior General of thoReligious Teachers Filippini in 1954 (she was reelected in 1960.)Her cousin. Mother Carolina Jonata, M.P.F., replaced her as
superior of the American Province at Villa Walsh. MorristownMother Ellen Marie succeeded Mother Bcnita as Superior Gen-eral of the Sisters of Charity in 1953 and was in turn succeededby Mother Joanna Mario in 1959. Mother Mary Dolorita, 0.P.,became Superior General of the Dominican Sisters of Caldwell in1957; Mother M. Virginctte, C.S.S.F., provincial superior of thoFelician Sisters in 1959; and Mother Mary Virgina, S.S.C., pro-vincial superior of tho Sisters of Christian Charity in 1959. Thisyear. Rev. Donald Hoag. 0.F.M., former pastor of St. Joseph's,East Rutherford, was elected provincial of the Franciscans.
In addition to Seton Hall, the college building program in-eluded St. Peter’i, Caldwell and St. Elizabeth's, with a
concentration on facilities forscience. All three also changedpresidents. Very Rev. EdwardClark, S.J., succeeded VeryRev. James J. Shanahan at
St. Peter’s in 1960. Sister Hll-
degarde Mario replaced SisterMarie Jose at St. Elizabeth’*
in 1952, and Sister Mary Mar-guerite, 0.P., succeeded Moth-er Mary Joseph, 0.P., at Cald-well in 1956.
AND WHILE taken up withits own problems, North Jer-
sey still .served its role in theUniversal Church. Missioncollections rose each year tonew records. Boys and girlscontinued to join mission or-ders and left for service inail parts of the world. Threeof these were ordained priestsof tho Newark Archdiocese,who joined the Society of St.James, founded by CardinalCushing: Rev. Martin R. Kel-
ly in 1960 and Rev. John F.Mee and Rev. Richard Brozat
in 1961,
New EmphasisTo Counseling
WASHINGTON (NC) - Thefederal government will spend$7 million next year to stepup its program of trainingcounselors for high sfchool
students.
The program played a roleIn the recent Congressionalcontroversy over federal aidto education because it denies
equal benefits to counselors in
public and in church-relatedand other private schools whoattend training institutes.
Public school teachers are
given $75 a week plus a $l5 al-lowance a week for each de-
pendent. Private school teach-
ers do not get these benefits,but are charged no tuition.
MORE THAN 900 stations
carry the daily Sacred Heart
Radio Program.
Archbishop Asks
Dialogue Mass
MELBOURNE, Australia(NO —Archbishop DanielMannix of Melbourne declaredthat the normal form of publicMass should bo the DialogueMass, and that sung Massesshould be a regular feature of
parish life on Sundays andmajor feasts.
The Archbishop sent a cir-cular letter to bis clergy urg-
ing them to work toward fullparticipation by their peoplein the worship of the Church.
He designated the new. lo-rally published handbook, "Di-alogue Mass," as the norm tolie observed for communityMasses throughout the arch-diocese. lie said also that to(osier lay participation in the
liturgy, the Instruction on Sa-cred Music and the Liturgypromulgated by the Holy Seeon Sept. 3. 1958, should be"accepted as the guide andrule of this archdiocese."
PATERSON'S BISHOP: Bishop Mc-
Nulty was Auxiliary Bishop of New-ark when The Advocate began 10 yearsago, and he was its first president. Heis shown above greeting his mother athis installation as Bishop of Patersonin 1953. Shortly after his arrival in
Paterson, Bishop McNulty acceptedThe Advocate as the newspaper of the
Paterson Diocese. With him above is
his nephew, John Tuite.
NEWARK’S ARCHBISHOP: In 1953
Bishop Boland of Paterson became
Archbishop Boland of Newark. Deeplyconcerned about the value of the Sac-rament of Confirmation, ArchbishopBoland has conferred it on people un-
der unusual circumstances - for ex-
ample on retarded children in the Mt.
Carmel Guild program, and to thebedridden woman above. It was also
during his episcopate that the twice-annual confirmation of adult converts
has been inaugurated in Sacred HeartCathedral as part of the Confraternity
of Christian Doctrine program.
Catholic North Jersey’s Decade...
(Continued from Page 8)
December 28, 1961 THE ADVOCATE 9
f ■ I pv
~
■ ■
jT
m
l
V
FELIX FOX
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Proud of our heritage and
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Congratulations to The Advocate...from the paint stores where you get a
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At Fox we are proud of our history in the paint business. Felix Sr.came to the United States in 1919 from County Armagh. And has beenin the paint business ever since, except for a few years spent in theSouth Pacific with the Seebees.
Ray Herrmann at the Kearny store had his training at Coleman'sSchool of Business, hung up his Ist Lieutenant's uniform after WorldWar II and has been with his father-in-law since.
Patrick Joseph, the eldest son, had his schooling at St. Peter's.After schooling entered the business with his father, served with theArmy in Africa, returned to the business after the war.
Felix Jr., was the lucky one. He receive.his degree from SetonHall University, served as a Ist Lieutenant in the Marine Corps andsince his discharge has been in the business with Felix Sr.
All of the clan certainly are men with proven backgrounds in thepaint field and extend to their customers a wealth of knowledge in
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‘Shun All Thought of Force,' Pope’s Message PleadsNCWC New, Service
Following is the text of anEnglish translation wade avail-able by the Vatican Press Office of the Christmas address givenby Pope John XXIII on Dec. 21, 1961. The Pope called on
uorId leaders for new efforts to achieve peace and securityThe Birthday of The Lord,
the Feast of Peace.No matter how one seeks to
tell the glories of the greatmystery and to express thefullness of grace which glad-dens every believer in JesusChrist at this time, it is im-possible to surpass what thosefew word contain.
This, then, is the message ofBethlehem: the glory of God,true peace, and the invitationto the human will to corre-
spond with so great a gift."Gloria in excclsis Deo; pax
hominibus bonac voluntatis”(Luke 2, 14).
IN THE COURSE of cen-
turies the literature of thosecountries in which the light ofChrist has shone has been un-
able to add anything to thisthreefold revelation which wasdeclared to men at the comingof the Son of God into theworld.
Messages of PeaceThis is now the fourth Christ-
mas on which we (the poorson of the people—if we may
openly express what we in-wardly consider ourself to he—called to the summit of thepriesthood and the governmsnt
of the Church) have, by thehelp of God’s grace, put allour heart into declaring thisgreat message of peace.
ON THE PREVIOUS occa-
sions we rejoiced to set the
peace of Bctlilehcm before allmankind from three differentpoints of view. Always thefpeace of Christ, but as seen"
in the radiance of its noblestmanifestations: peace and jus-tice, peace and unity, peaceand truth.
In this threefold radianec themost important and most pre-cious blessings of mankindbrilliantly shine forth. As an
expression of the good wisheswhich men at this season ex-
change among themselvesthere is nothing more suitablethan this manifold effulgenceof the riches that the Word ofGod made Man brings down toearth for the redemption andexaltation of mankind.
YOU KNOW WELL, dearchildren, how the fathers ofthe Church, both East andWest, the doctors and Pontiffswhose voices intermingle and
blend in harmony, are ac-
knowledged to be the mostfaithful interpreters of theteaching, old but ever new, ofheaven's message.
from that chorus one voice,familiar to us in our youth,rings out this year in accentsof renewed fervor. It is thevoice of St. Leo the Great, the15th century of whose deathwe have recently celebratedin our encyclical “AeternaDei.”
Words of St. LeoIn the happy celebrations of
last November it was a joy forus to draw the inspiration of
our words from this great doc-tor. And similarly today, we
delight to direct your eyes to-
ward the stable of Bethlehemby means of words taken fromhis Christmas sermons ser-
mons which still preserve their
lively personal style. Listen tohis words:
"Generatio . . . Christi origoest populi christiani, et na-
talis capitis natalis est cor-
poris." Beloved children, whatbeautiful words arc these:"The birth of Christ is thebirth of the Christian people;the birthday of the Head is the
birthday also of the body.”And he continues:
"EVEN THOUGH everyoneof those who arc called hashis own proper place, and
even though the children ofthe Church arc separated intime, nevertheless the wholebody of the faithful, born ofthe waters of Baptism ...
isgiven life with Christ in thisNativity ... And so the great-ness of the gift which is be-stowed on us requires of us a
reverence befitting its splen-dor
. . . What is more inkeeping with the dignity of to-
day’s feast than peace, whichat the Lord’s birth was for thefirst time proclaimed by thechoir of angels? It is peacethat gives life to the sons ofGod. it is the nurse of good-ness and the mother of unity. . . The birthday of Our Lordis the birthday of peace, for,as the Apostle says: ‘He him-self is ourpeace’ (Eph. 2,14).’’
The peace of wise and up-right men—to paraphrase St.Leo's thought, which comesfrom above and raises up on
high—is not to be confusedwith the easy-going indulgenceof lovers of this world. Itstands out against every ob-stacle and spurs men awayfrom dangerous pleasures towhere true joys are to befound. May we, united in a
single will and a single con-
viction, at one in faith andhope and love be led thither
by the Spirit of Peace (St.Leo, Sermon XXVI [On theNativity Vl|, 11, 111, V; Migne,PL 54 213,214,216).
These are the sublime wordsof St. Leo, and they speak
clearly on points of doctrineand of practical life. Every-thing is there: Holy Church,with all its ranks of believers,its honorable priesthood andits supreme pontificate actingas an instrument destined byGod for the uniting of the na-tions in such a way that a trueand lasting elevation of hu-
man society may be estab-lished.
Peace in GoodnessYes, all that we expressed in
greeting in our three previousChristmas messages is con-
tained there. Do you remem-
ber? Knowledge of the truth,"pax et veritas” (peace andtruth), leading us to adore theSon of God made man for us,
and to accept His message ofredemption. “Pax et veritas,"giving strength to high idealsand endurance to good resolu-tions of knowing and servingthe truth. "Pax et unitas”(peace and unity), an urgentinvitation to show loyalty tothis Apostolic Sec which is thecenter of unity.
And lastly, "pax et iustitia”(peace and justice), for thisvision of the unique reality ofthe Church contains invalua-ble means for building up a
solid social structure and forestablishing peaceful relationsbetween
men, whether be-tween individuals of the samenation or the same trade, orwhether on a universal scalein the world as a whole, whichbelongs to all and should guar-antee to all employment anda life of peace.
TO THIS threefold light ofpeace in truth, in unity, injustice, would it not be wellto add, this year, for our
greater spiritual profit, a
fourth ray. the light of good-ness, "pax Christi in boni-tatc" (the peace of Christ in
goodness).How gladly do we turn our
thoughts toward the gloriousKingdom of Christ in the spir-it of the liturgy, which is soonto
say: "The King of Peace isglorified and all the earthlongs for His favor. The Kingof Peace is glorified over allthe kings of the whole earth”(Vespers of Christmas). Letit be, then, the peace ofChrist in goodness.
The first thing that we sec
is Jesus inviting us from thecrib of Bethlehem, anticipat-ing the occasions in His laterlife when He. the Divine Mas-ter, will lie held in reverence
and hailed as rabbi by the en-thusiastic crowds, and will sayto them: "I.carn from Me. forI am meek and humble ofheart” (Matt. 11. 29).
This voice from the cnb Isthe outward manifestation ofthe "goodness” of Jesus, ofwhich He is the living realityand the divine source andwhose grace is the universal
authority of peace for all theworld.
7 he II arid TodayThis authority, ala*, full of
humility and meekness, andholding out the joy of univer-sal peace, remains with thepassing of the years a sign ofcontradiction and of the ob-stinate hardness of men intheir relations with one an-
other.
If we look at the events ofrecent times, we might wellsay that In our day fear andalarm are producing a burn-
ing fever of estrangement onefrom another. And though thisis unconscious in many cases,it is, for all that, noticeableIn dealings with others, andleads y> continuous disturb-
ance in'domestic, social, civiland international relationships.
BUCII AN observation is allthe more tragic when one re-
flects that in the Creator'sprovidential plan, men are
meant to understand, to helpand to complete one anotherby brotherly cooperation, bypatiently overcoming differ-
ences and by sharing the goodsof the earth fairly, •'iustiltaduce, cariiate comite," ac-
cording to charity and justice(Pius XII, encyclical Sertuin
I.actitiac, Nov. 1, taw).
On this subject the Prophetsand Psalms speak with clar-
ity, inculcating goodness and
love in the name of God.Isaias says: “Ease the in-supportable burden, set freethe over-driven; away withevery yoke that galls! Sharethy bread with the hungry,give the poor and the vagranta welcome to thy house; meetthou the naked, clothe him;from thy own flesh and bloodturn not away. The Lord willgive thee rest continually, fillthy soul with comfort” (Is58, 6-7, 11).
If we consider mutual rela-tionships as they exist todayin national and internationalaffairs, we can sec how farthey still arc from the divineteaching which shines in theage of the Old Testament andbursts out into perfect lightwith the coming of the DivineMaster in the fullness of time.All His teaching is an invita-tion to peace, for it proclaimsthe blessedness of peace. Buthere, on the contrary, underthe cloak of fair words—when,at least, the outward appear-ance is maintained, and eventhat unfortunately is not al-ways the case—there is oftena spirit opposed to peace.
It is the pride of the man ofpower who destroys. It is thegreed of the man of wealthwho hardens his heart to theneeds of his brothers (1 John3, 17).
It is the callousness ofthe complacent man who paysno heed to the great cry ofsuffering which exists in theworld. It is the selfishness ofthe man who thinks exclu-sively of himself.
Goodness LackingIn every case it is the good-
ness of Christ which is lack-ing, and which above all mustprovide the antidote to this
spirit of contradiction and
bard-heartednes?, paving the
way to a more peaceful atti-tude to things.
In our encyclical, Mater et
Magistra, it was our wish to
stress the fact that ‘"when
men arc animated by the char-
ity of Christ, they feel united,and the needs, sufferings andjoys of others arc felt as their
own. Consequently the actionof each one—as we said—can-not help but be more disinter-ested, more energetic, more
humane, because charity is
patient, is kind. . . sccketh
not her own ... rejoiccth not
in iniquity, but rcjoiceth withthe truth ... hopeth all
things, endureth all things”(1 Cor. 13. 4-7; A.A.S. LIU,(1961] p. 461).
IT IS GOOD that the sup-plication for peace which rises
up this year from the crib ofBethlehem should be an invo-cation of goodness, an appre-ciation of true brotheFhood, a
resolution of sincere coopera-tion. shunning all intrigue andall those discordant elements
which we have called andwhich we call again without
disguising our words: pride,greed, callousness, selfish-
ness.
The invitation should be allthe more pressing, for mutualdistrust is making conditions
progressively worse. Consider
only the state of fcarfulncss
in which men are living be-
cause of flaunted violence andfostered enmity, and it is clearthat this is giving rise to a
general coolness and making itmore and more widespread.
In such a situation it is na-tural to think of the grave
and solemn words of Christ,spoken in prophecy and warn-
ing: “Because iniquity hathabounded the charity of many
shall grow cold” (Matt. 24,12).
Man is no longer brother,good, merciful and loving to
his fellow men. but has be-
come a stranger, calculating,suspicious and selfish.
WHAT A CRYING need there
is for the only remedy, which
is to be found in giving a wel-
come to Jesus of Bethlehem,the Lamb of God, Who has
come to take away the sin ofthe world (cf. John 1, 29), in
having recourse to His grace,in putting into practice His
teaching of mercy.
0 blessed feast of Christ-mas: meeting place of simplefolk, invitation to inner pur-ity, to goodness to all men, for“the kindness of God, Our Sa-vior, dawned on us, His greatlove for men” (Tit. 3,4).
W lial We Must DoIt is sad to have to deplore
evil, but merely to deplore itdoes not remove it. We mustdesire, accomplish and exalt
10 THE ADVOCATE December 28,
(Continued onPage 11)
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the good. It is goodness thatwe must openly proclaim be-fore the world, so that itshines out and permeates ev-
ery form of individual and so-
cial activity.Every individual must be
good because he is the mirrorof a clear conscience whichdoes not admit of duplicity,cunning or hardness of heart-He must be good by beinggiven continually to interiorpurification and true perfec-tion, by being faithful to an
unshakeable purpose, themeasure of all his thoughtsand actions.
“The family too must begood," with mutual love burn-ing like a flame in the exer-cise of all virtue. Goodnessaweetens and strengthens pa-ternal authority, and is nur-tured by maternal tenderness.It encourages obedience on
the part of the children, con-trols the exuberance of youth,inspires necessary sacrifices.
THERE IS furthermore thatgoodness which should rule our
actions “‘outside the confinesof the home," though in un-
ion with it. Various applica-tions can be given in theschools of all grades, in thevarious institutions of civiclife, which is ordered to theharmonious association of cit-izens based on peace, respectand friendship. All the rela-tionships of the social orderare founded on goodness,which St. Leo the Great rec-ommends in the most vivid
language:“To commit injustice and to
make reparation this is theprudence of this world. On thecontrary, not to render evilfor evil is the virtuous expres-sion of Christian forgiveness...Therefore let humility beloved and let the faithful shunall arrogance. Let everyonegive preference to his breth-ren before himself, and let no
one seek his own interest, butthat of his neighbor, so thatwhere all are filled with be-nevolence. there may be no
place left for the poison ofenmity" (Sermon XXXVI! [onthe Epiphany VII), IV; Migne.PL 54, 259).
“AND FINALLY all human-ity must be good." These
words, which resound throughthe ages and are now repeat-ed with modern accents, re-
called the duty incumbent on
all men to be good. That
means to be just, upright, gen-
erous, disinterested, willing to
understand and to forgive,ready to grant pardon with
magnanimity. As an invitationto the exercise of this duty,we turn to the appeal, which
with all trust we started out
to make in this radio broad-cast, to desire peace and toeliminate all obstacles in its
way.
Risk Everythin!!We cannot believe that the
terrific energy now under thecontrol of man will be re-
leased for the world's destruc-tion. For side by side with ele-
ments of fear and apprehen-sion, there are positive signsof goodwill that is construc-tive and productive of good.While we give thanks to the
Lord, the source of goodness,we also give voice to a heart-felt appeal that all those whocontrol forces shouldrisk everything—Put not the
peace of the world and thelives of men—to seek everymeans that modern progresshas put at their disposal to in-
crease the welfare and secu-
rity of the world, and not to
sow distrust and mutual sus-
picion.
AND AGAIN, to use thewords of our encyclical Materct Magistra, "Wo point out
with sadness ... that whileon the one hand are broughtout in strong relief situationsof want, and the specter ofmisery and hunger haunts us,
on the other hand scientific
discoveries, technical inven-tions and economic resources
are being used, often exten-
sively, to provide terrible in-struments of ruin and death"(A.A.S. LIII [1916] p. 418).
We also appeal to those re-
sponsible for forming publicopinion, even if only in a lim-ited area, to fear the severe
judgment of God and of his-tory and to proceed with cau-
tion. governed by a sense ofbalance. On not a few occa-sions in modem times —andthis we state with candor andregret—the press has contributed to the production of an
atmosphere of aversion, en
mity and discord.
WE APPEAL TO the rulersof nations, who today hold inIheir hands the fate of man-
kind. You also arc men, fra-gile and mortal. Upon you arc
the anxious eyes of your fel-
low-men, who arc first your
brothers before they are your
subjects.With the authority which we
have received from JesusChrist, we say: Shun allthought of force: think of thetragedy of initiating a chainreaction of acts, decisions andresentments that could eruptinto rash and irreparabledeeds. You have received
great powers not to destroybut to build, not to divide but
to unite, not to cause tears to
be shed but to provide em-
ployment and security.These arc the various appli-
cations of that goodness thatshould penetrate every aspectof human life. This goodnessis power and dominion over
oneself, patience with others,charity that is neither extin-guished nor dimmed because it
sincerely wills the welfare ofall according to the immortalwords of St. Augustine:
"It remains peaceful in themidst of insults, productive of
good amidst hate; meek inspite of anger, harmless
amidst snares: it groans
among the iniquitous, andbreathes in the truth: 'interinequitates gemens, in veritate
respirans'" (Sermon 350, 3).
Common ObliitationVenerable brethren and be-
loved children. In the renew-ed contemplation of the Son ofGod made Man. may the mes-
sage of goodness and evangel-ical charity come to all men
in its full clarity. May it beto all believers anew inspira-tion to live tt in its fullness,giving an example to an anx-
ious world. May it appeal toall men of goodwill to make
salutary reflections on the ap-
plications of those principlesupon which well-ordered sociallife is founded.
The humble Vicar of Christin raising his voice wished topropose with the clearest evi-dence the common obligationthat flows from the very es-
sence of Christmas.
AS WE END this message,our thoughts turn with aflcclion to all humanity for whosesalvation the Divine Word be-
came Incarnate, and in partic-ular to the suffering, to thoseenduring tribulations nf mindand body, to those who arc denied justice and charity. To allgo our paternal good wishesfor all consolation.
We cannot pass over the an-
xiety that our heart feels atthe thought that when next
Christmas Day dawns uponthe world, there will still be
people without peace, withoutsecurity, without religioua liberty—people tormented by thespecter of war and (amine.For them our most fervent
prayers and supplications riseIs heaven, together with a pa-ternal wish that all difficultiesand controversies be resolvedequitably and a renewed ap-peal to the rulers of all na-
tions that through their uniteddlorts Justice, equity, and thatlonged lor peace may lie reallied.
tin the note o! peace, found-ed on true goodness, we are
pleased to end our message towhich wo add our best wishesand the gift of the apostolicblessing.
TIIK REGISTER chain ofdiocesan Catholic newspaperswas established in 1929.
CHRISTMAS PRESENT: CWV Commander Albert J. Schwind of Clifton presentsa spiritual bouquet for Pope John to Archbishop Egidio Vagnozzi, Apostolic Dele-gate. Schwind also gave a check to the Archbishop, which with the prayer offeringwas forwarded to the Holy See for Christmas. At right is Msgr. Aloysius S.
Carney, pastor of St. Rose of Lima, Newark, national chaplain of the CWV.
Dr. Lesko Heads
Medical Staff
At St. Mary'sPASSAIC Dr. Stephen W.
Lesko of Passaic has beenelected president of the medi-cal staff at St. Mary's Hospi-tal here.
Chief of the second surgicaldivision. Dr. Lesko has beenat St. Mary’s since 1928, whenhe began his internship there.He is a graduate of Fordham
University and New YorkMedical College and a fellowof the International College of
Surgeons.Chosen to serve as vice
president was Dr. James V.
Irragi of Clifton, chief of the
second gynecological service,lie attended Providence Col-
lege and New York Medical
College and is a graduate ofthe University of Rome. Dr.irragi is also a fellow of the
American and International
Colleges of Surgeons.Dr. Marion F. Kaletkowski
of Clifton and Dr. Irving Okin
of Passaic were reelected as
secretary and treasurer, re-
spectively. The retiring presi-dent, Dr. Thomas F. Reilly ofClifton, was appointed to the
executive committee, alongwith Dr. Joseph A. Latona ofChiton.
Not Guilty Plea
In Smut CaseEAST ORANGE - Guy
Schultz, 34, whose apartment
yielded an estimated $20,000worth of pornography in a
raid conducted by the Essex
County sheriff's office on Dec.12, surrendered to police on
Dec. 20 alter his return from
a business trip to Chicago.Arraigned before Magistrate
William Wilkcns. Schultz
pleaded not guilty to chargeso( sodomy, private lewdncss
and the possession of porno-graphic material.
The defendant waived pre-liminary examination and was
ordered held for the grandjury by Magistrate Wilkcns.He was turned over to the
county prosecutor's office,where he was held in $2,000
bail, pending the filing of fed
era) charges on illegal use ofthe mails.
Meanwhile, in Jersey City,Albert L. Schutter of NorthBergen pleaded guilty before
Hudson County Judge James
Rosen on a charge of posses-
sion of obscene literature. Hewill be sentenced Jan. 12.
English Shrine
LONDON (NO - Cardinal
Godfrey of Westminister haslaid the cornerstone of the
new Shrine of the Sacred
Heart and the English Martyrsat Tyburn in London.
ST. ANSOVINUB is the pa-tron protector of crops.
All Souls Receives PaintingFrom Former Art Instructor
MORRISTOWN The art-
ist's name signed to the new
painting of St. Francis at AllSouls Hospital here is one
that is hardly unfamiliar to
the institution.
Donated by Hugh Stearns of
Morristown, the painting isthe work of Brother Matthewof the Franciscan MissionaryBrothers of the Sacred Heartof Jesus, who, before he en-
tered religious life, was John
Irving Gallagher of Morris-town.
In those days, Gallagherconducted
a religious shophere and also gave free art
lessons, in his spare time, to
patients and workers at AllSouls.
He entered the Fran-ciscan Brothers in 1959 and isstationed at their only Ameri-can foundation in Eureka, Mo.,a home for aged men.
One of his earlier paintingsis at the Legion of MaryShrine at St. Vincent de Paul,Stirling.
Sister Mary Eleanor, the
administrator of All Souls, ac-
cepted the painting of St.Francis from Stearns.
Cardinal Spellman Offers
Christmas Mass in Berlin
BERLIN Cardinal Spell-tnan said three Masses for
military personnel here on
Christmas Day and touredBerlin’s own Chinese wall inthe climax of his 11th annual
holiday visit with American
troops overseas.
The Cardinal, who as Mili-
tary Vicar is religious leaderof Catholics in the Armed
Forces, is on a 15-day tour ofbases in Germany andFrance.
At almost every one of thebases the Cardinal is visitinghe offers Mass. At Wiesbadenhe visited the base hospitaland talked with medical per-sonnel. He also urged the peo-ple to "pray for peace, workfor peace, pray for our coun-
try’s survival and our own
reward of life eternal.”
At a news conference he
said 1961 has been "a verysad year, a frustrating one."
Among the sad events he list-
ed were the Indian invasion of
Portuguese-held Goa and the
“very desperate” situation in
Cuba. However, he said, "spir-
itually, I’m optimistic.”In Berlin, the Cardinal walk-
ed six feet into East Berlin at
the Friedrichstrasse crossingpoint and wished communist
police there a “happy Christ-
mas.” lie received no reply.
Church DamagedPARIS (RNS) - A fire be-
lieved to have been caused bythieves seriously damaged the
sacristy of the 12th century
Church of St. Pierre in Mont-
martre here.
Pope’s Christmas Message. . .
(Continued from Page 10)
December 28, 1961 THE ADVOCATE 11
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(Editorial reprinted from Tht Advocate, Dec. 30, 1951)
The Advocate And The Archdiocese
If a question were to be raised about the Advocate,it should not be, "WHY is it being established now?" but,"Why was it not established long ago?” There is hardlya city or town that has not its own newspaper. Small
dioeescs as well as great archdioceses likewise have news-
papers of their own. Yet the Archdioceso of Newark was
without one. True, it was served faithfully for years byHie Catholic News, which published a New Jersey edition.This, however, proved inadequate to the growing needsof the teeming, vibrant metropolitan See of New Jersey.
There had been talk of establishing an official newspaper
in the Archdiocese of Newark. The time for talk had to
end. Thank God. it has ended: and Newark now has the
Advocate.
I.ike all Catholic newsapers, the Advocate will presentCatholic news on the international, national, and local
levels: and whenever necessary, give the Catholic in-
terpretation of general news. It will counteract the influ-
ence of the secular press which seldom mentions God or
the things of God but not infrequently goes into unsavorydetail in describing vice and crime.
It has been said that a Catholic whose reading is re-
stricted exclusively to the secular press becomes, almost
without realizing it. pagan in his judgments of men and
events. It has been said, too, that the Catholic home
which has not a Catholic paper coming into it regularlyis on its way to a lessened, if not a lost, faith. The Advo-
cate, being the official newspaper of the Archdiocese of
Newark, will have a wide circulation and will perform a
missionary service by coming into many homes which
heretofore have not subscribed to a Catholic newspaper,
Considering the Advocate purely as an Arehdiocesean
newspaper, it is impossible to exaggerate its advantages
to the Archdiocese. It is the Archbishop's official organ
for the expression of his views, the projection of his plans,and the promulgation of his decrees. Through its pages
His Excellency will be able to reach more than one mil-
ion Catholics who arc members of the Archdiocese.
This vast number of men, women and children are
intensely active. In their parishes, their religious societies
and sodalities, and their many other organizations dedi-
cated to charitable, educational, social and recreational
pursuits, they are doing things which are newsworthy.
Among the clergy, tho religious and the laity there arc
many outstanding men and women whose achievements
should be publicized. The Advocate will write of them.
Many an item of interest will be furnished by the
Archdiocese's 210 parishes, 210 colleges and schools, 14
orphanages, nine hospitals and four homes for the agedand the blind. The Associated Catholic Charities, The
Mount Carmel Guild, the Society for the I’ropogatlon of
the Faith and the other Agencies of the Archdiocese will
also provide colorful stories.
Furthermore, while the Advocate will carry many pop-
ular syndicated columns on a variety of subjects, it wtll
also print columns especially written for it by priests and
laymen of the Archdiocese who are experts in their fields
of activity.
The Advocate will supplement the pulpit, the religiousschool and the missionary society. It will expound Cath-
olic principals and repel attacks which are made uponfaith and morality. It will be the aim of the Advocate to
make Its readers happy by presenting truth. "For a hap-
py life," according to St. Augustine, "is Joy m the truth."
For more than 100 years Altenburg Piano House has been servicing tho Churches,
Rectories, Convents, Institutions and laity of the Archdiocese of Newark and Diocese
of Paterson. And we gratefully acknowledge the patronage and confidence placedin us, and extend to The Advocate our sincere congratulations on the occasion of
your Tenth Anniversary.
PIANO HOUSE. INC
tit. 1847
1150 EAST JERSEY ST.
ELIZABETH
NEW JERSEY
A Time to ThinkThe old year passes" Should we
mourn its passing in somber words or
drown out its expiring sigh in revelry?It is not the old year’s passing that stirs
up revelry, but the New Year's begin-ning. There is singing and dancing inthe streets not because a year dies, butbecause anew one is born. The noiseand revels are perhaps in some vague
and confused way an expression of
man’s hope in the future. If such be thecase, hang out more flags, play more
bands, raise louder songs in the nightfor men have need of hope this year as
never before.
THERE ARE MANY who will not
make merry tonight. For many it is a
bent world, and their great need is the
power to behold the Spirit of God brood-ing over the bent world with brightwings.
Many need food, shelter, medi-
cine, companionship. The poor arc al-
ways with us even in this land of super-abundance. Other lands have so many
hungry that women and children die inthe streets without a song.
In his Christmas message the HolyFather reminded us that it is God's
providential plan that we help one an-
other “by sharing the goods of the earth
fairly, according to charity and jus-tice.” Referring to the cause of the pres-ent social condition of the world, he de-clared:
“It is the greed of the man ofwealth who hardens his heart to theneed of his brothers. It is the callous-ness of the complacent man who paysno heed to the great cry of sufferingwhich exists in the world.” For the HolyFather and his children the antidote tothese evils is “the goodness of Christ.”
THOSE who do live by “the good-ness of Christ” might think hard andlong on these words of Wcrnher vonBraun:
“What makes us want to beethical? I believe there are two forceswhich move us. One is belief in theLast Judgment
...the other is belief inan immortal soul
... In our modernworld many people scent to feel thatscience has somehow made such ‘reli-gious ideas’ untimely or old - fashioned.But I think science has a real surprisefor the skeptics. Science, for instance,tells us that nothing in nature, not
even the tiniest particle, can disappearwithout trace ... Nature does not knowextinction. All it knows is transforma-tion.”
The Right to an OpinionThe National Catholic Welfare Conference
through its legal department has suggested thatthe United States Constitution docs not bar fed-
eral aid to church-related schools in specializedareas. This study was conducted by William
R. Conscdinc, the head of the N.C.W.C. legaldepartment.
An extensive probing of the meaning of
the First Amendment to the Constitution was
made. The relative decisions made in seven
eases which were brought before the United
States Supreme Court reveal confusion. These
seven decisions involved aid to church-related
schools. The study revealed that the ronstitu-
tionality of government aid to church-related
schools may he constitutional if the aid is lim-ited to “secular or neutral aspects of educa-tion" which arc substantially the same in publicand non-public schools.
The study also revealed that such aid couldtake the form of matching grants or long termloans to institutions, grants of tutilion or schol-
arships and tax benefits. As was pointed out inthe study, many of these plans are already in
operation throughout the country.
A VERY SALIENT point exposed in this
itudy was the fact that by denying federal aidto church-related schools, it would place an
Intolerable burden upon the Catholic parents ofAmerica in continuing to maintain a Catholicsystem of education having been granted this
privilege by the United States Supreme CourtIn 1925 in the famous Oregon Case, where it
was decided that the parents have the rightto choose for their children education in church-related schools.
A choice will have to be made that thefederal government will have a completemonopoly of education if every form of federalaid is completely withheld from church-relatedschools. This fact becomes frightening in a
democratic society.
ONLY THE BIASED will deny that the
church-related schools, particularly those con-ducted by the Catholic Church, have made andarc making an enormous contribution to theeducation of the children of America. As of thisyear. 5-1/2 million children arc attending Cath-olic schools, or 13% of the children of America
arc being educated in a Catholic Church-relatedschool. This is considered to he a saving tothe taxpayers of America of close to $2 bil-lion.
The report further points out that theCatholic schools of America have "proven an
invaluable training ground to prepare citizensfor full pntieipation in a pluralistic society.”
Mr. Conscdinc stresses the fact that thisreport is not a petition for specific aid: rather,he hopes that the report will serve to clarifvconstitutional issues and to cause a more
widespread recognition of the massive contribu-tion of church-related schools and other privateschools to the common welfare.
THIS STUDY CAN be invaluable to allthose who read it. It is a logical, unemotionalpresentation of the position of the legal depart-ment of the NCWC on the position of church-related schools in America. It Is a plea forunderstanding and consideration. It is an at-tempt made to reconcile the thinking of theSupreme Court of the United States with therealities of modern education in America.
It is hoped that in reading the report weunderstand that the parents and children aremembers of the Catholic Church and at thesame time they are citizens of the UnitedStates: by reason of belonging to the Churrhthey do not and should not lose their rightsas citizens.
If our government could adopt a modusagondi for the operation of the G.I. Kill ofRights, then could not a constitutional formulahe found for the parents and the children whousing their constitutional rights in selecting achurch related school, should be barred fromfederal aid to education?
The Shepherd SpeaksThe world awaits each year the Christmas
message of the Holy Father. Men have cometo know that this annual admonition is fromthe lips of a Shepherd who contemplates themystery of the Incarnation and from his rapt-contemplation finds a simple shepherd's wis-dom. The message has come to stand forsimple profundity and wise simplicity, devoidof the heavier tones of the Holy Father's moreformal pronouncements. This year's message is
no exception.The Shepherd knows that the true gift of
Christ's birthday is peace, the peace the angelsang of so long ago His Holiness Is not so
naive as to imagine that this true and constantgift of Christmas is a possession of men in1961. Knowing that, by the Incarnation. Christ
is present in the world and that concomitantpeace is not. the Shepherd of men finds the
cause with unerrant accuracy. The Giver ofpeace has not lost Ills desire to give, nor isHis incarnate presence withdrawn The reason
for the absence of peace is found in the heartsof men rather than in the Heart of Christ.
JOHN Will cries out that pride of puwer.
and greed, and complacency, and selfishness,have all made it impossible for peace lo nour-ish. He has found in men’s attitudes lo things,created things, possessiveness that encouragessubversion, enmity and discord - all of themas variants with the spirit of Christ which isthe spirit of the Nativity. As in “Mater el Mag-Istra." the Holy Father remembers once mprrthat those who issue the communiques and turnthe presses of the world cloak evil motivationsin fair words and use their tremendous powerlor the creation of suspicion rather than trust
This contemporary Shepherd makes it clearthat the Peace of Christ can only come fromguodness which is rooted in Christ. Even onthe night of the Nativity peace was apportionedto those of good will. It is this good will |„rwhich Ihe Papal Shepherd prays. He asks frommen the good will to give to all nations reli-gious freedom, to all men peace, security andliberty, and to the dispossessed a portion of thepossessors This Shepherd precedes the wisemen of this grncralton to llclhlehcm as theangel-directed shepherds did so many cen-furies ago. Pray that in ihis age. u„e menwill listen ami be led. for Hie Shepherd speaks
Anniversary
The Advocate's First IssueThe dale on the masthead
reads Dec. 30. tuit. To theleft is the notation Vol. I, No.1. The pages are a little ye]lowed with age, torn in places,but the pioneer issue of TheAdvocate still makes interest
ing reading lo years after itfirst appeared.
On its first page are letters,placed side by side, from Vat-ican City to Archbishop Walsh,expressing Pope Piu* Xll's
pleasure at the publication o
the paper and from Arch-
bishop WaUh in greeting toThe Advocate as a “welcomeservant of truth.”
THE LEAD STORY is ofthe school suh»rription cru-
sade which laid Hu-grumnlwork for circulation which wa>
to pass 120.000 before the pa
per* loth birthday OtherPage 1 stories reported theChristmas Eve message o!
Pope Pius XII. the MidnightMass celebrated by Archbish-
op Stepmae in Krasic. Yugo-slavia, and the attack »n thechairman of a UNESCO pr..j
ect to write the lu.tory of mankind as "emphatically amivigorously atheistic "
A quick run through the m
aide pages reveals severalitems which foreshadowed
things to come The first “featurf' to appear lit the paper
is found on page 3. a storyby Managing Editor FloydAndrrson on Sacred HeartCathedral, then on its way to-ward completion.
PAGE 4 CARRIES the firstoi hundreds of lexis of mes-
sages from the two Popes whohave reigned during this dec-ade the Christmas messageof 1951 with peace as its
theme. This began The Advocate's, policy of carrying thefull text ut all Papal messageswhich are translated
There are also three build-
ing stories m the issue, fore-
runners of the hundred* to be
punted over the next lu years.One tells of a groundbreakinglor a church and school at St.James. Springfield, the othersshow the architect's drawingol the Archbishop Walsh HighSchool and the new si.Catharine's church in Glen
RockTwo columnists whose by-
lines still appear in these
pages are also to be found
William II Mooring on motionpictures and Louis lludetiz onthe communist threat Other
by liners of the first issue havedisappeared, one of these be
IKS lies J jiiit- s M Uillls,CS P.
Msgr, George Shea’scolumn. “The Faith in Fo-
rus." also appears on thatf-rsl editorial page, as it didfur some years after.
the FEATURE depart-ments of The Advocate arewell represented in the firstissue - two pages of women’sm ws. one of sport* and one
lor youth And. since lt»st wasa year which found the UnitedStales at war. readers of TheAdvocate were able lo followi animal Spellman on his visit
I* Korean troop* through thecoverage of Rev, PatrickO Connor, roving corres-
pondent of lire NCWC NewsService.
Local news is also well tak-en tare of m the initial issue.In addition to tire buddingstories arul the Cathedral fea-ture, there are stories onCatholic societies, the first|*onttfieation o| the late M*gr.John J Murphy, PA. of *>atied Heart, \ailsburg; thefight against the placing ofGideon Hible. in Rutherfordpublic schools; the presenta-tion of filnis to the CatholicFilin Library Service by thethen Msgr Stanton; and theobituaries of two priests whohad observed llte golden anmversary of their ordinations,•Msgr Frederick I »> \,.iami Rev. Peter Kramer, O.Carat,
Make a Masterpiece
The Birth of Christ:
When and WhereBy Frank J. Sheed
The human life of God-the-Son began in Nazareth whenthe angel Gabriel brought a
message from God to Mary, a
virgin betrothed to Joseph a
carpenter. Before wc come to
the message. let us considerthe time and the place and the
people concerned when,where, who.
WHEN: Everybody knowsthat time I* cither B.C. (Be-fore Christ) or Ail. (SinceChrist): therefore the Annun-ciation must have taken placeat the beginning of 1 A.D.;But it did not.
Wr owe the division of B.C.from A ll to a sixth centurymonk. Dionysius Kxiguus.England seems lo have beenthe firs! country to adopt it,and only when Dionysius hadWen two rentunes dead. Ittook another two renturies to
reach Rome. Dionysius placedthe birth of Our Lord in the
year 753 alter the founding ofold Rome, that Wing the dat-ing user) In Hie Roman Em-pire.
Hr overlooked one fact. Her-od died in 750 which is -IB.C, by Dionysius’ reckoning.Dut Christ was born in the
reign ol llrrod. whose fury atthe news ol His birth led to
the Might of the Holy Familyinto Egypt So Christ was WrnH.C.! certainly by 4 It. t\,perhaps as early as 8 8.C.;we do not know
Whenever the birth was. thevisit of the angrt Gabrielwould have Wen nine monthsWfore that TWrc is an ironyIn the thought that the Kingof King* was Wrn a subjectof the worst king the Jewsever had.
WHERE: It Is a shock to
realize how small Palestine
was ISO miles from end toend. 23 miles wide in thenorth. SO in Ihc sooth. The to-tal area was 9.7u0 square
tittles —a few more than Ver-
mont And rvrn that was nev-
er wholly held by the Jews,what with Phoenicians lutingin at the n«rlh and Philistines
at the southThe pocket-handkerchief of
land was the homeland o( theJews No people so small has
ever affected world history as
they have. And not only reli-
giously Eighteen hundred
years Wfore Christ the great-est world empire was Egypt *
—and the Prime Minuter was
a Jew. Joseph, son of Jacob,
Eighteen hundred years aft-
er Christ Hie greatest world
empire was Britain's, and the
Prime Minister was a Jew,Beniamin Disraeli (whohough! the Suez Canal for Bri-tain! The energy which over
a space o| almost 4 not yearscould bring this people to tin-
top m nations n»t their own,
is matchless, unapproachable.
AROUND IVo It C they had
settled definitively in Pales-
tine Their history need not beoutlined, but a lew (mintsshould be noted They reached
their highest (Mint of worldly
power under King David amihu son, Solomon (roughly Itssi
IIC.) After Solomon’s death
Ihey split into |wo kingdomshrael m the north, destroy-
ed by Assyria, and Judah in
the south, destroyed by Uahy-lon.
There was a vast deporta-tion of Jews mtu Babylon, a
return from exile So year*later Me are now approaching
500 B.C. In the centuries thatfollowed they had a varied his-tory of conquest by one peopleafter another, a brief indepen-dence. conquest again, thistime by the Romans. 70 yearsbefore Our Lord.
By the time of the Annun-ciation. most of Palestine wasruled by the unspeakable Her-od as part of the Roman Em-pire. It had three major divi-sions Galileo in the north.Judea in the south, both theseJewish: in between. Samaria,its inhabitants descended fromcolonists, sent in by the Assyr-ians in the eighth century,who intermarried with thehandful of Jews who had notbeen deported.
FOR 100 YEARS Samaria
was polytheist. Their offer to
help with the building of the
new temple in Jerusalem was
contemptuously refused. Sothe Samaritans built theirown temple on Mt. Garizimand gradually came to sec
themselves as the true heirsof the patriarchs, the heirswho had stayed there all thetime while the Jews were inforeign parts.
One of the least consider-able villages of Galilee wasNazareth. It was just under 90
miles from Jerusalem thedistance of Philadelphia fromNew York. It is never men-tioned in the Old Testament.It was so inconsiderable thateven little Cana, four miles
away, could despise it. Herelived Mary, lo whom God sent
a message by the angel Ga-briel.
Reds HopefulAs '62 Dawns
By Louis F. Budenz
We who believe in God findourselves today in much Hu-same position as the third tosixth century Bishops. Con-fronted with the barbarians'it,mutations of the West, theydefended their cities and sav-ed Christian culture.
SINCE OCRS i» mainly a
psychological warfare, manymay not recognize at first thatCardinal Spellman spoke thetruth when hr stated that Rus-sia was now in the “near tofinal chapter” of a long-rangeplan to conquer the world.
Rut everything is not goinga* the Kremlin wants it to goThe vole against admission o[Red China to the UN may becited, although Red China willagain come knocking on UNdoors What Is equally impor-tant is that the UN, in brush-ing aside I’upe John's plea (or
a cease-fire m Katanga. ha»given considerable comfort loMoscow’s ambitions to take
over that central African na-
Hun,
TIIE NEW TIMES of Nov.29 contains s directive entitled“Washington Against the Con-go."
Tills wa* before any de-cisive move in that area, amiit is interesting to read thatMoscow insisted then thatthere W a forceful obliterationol Moise TshomW and his■'lorcign mercenaries."
The UN was told that air
forces were needed to crushKatanga ami that the UNcuuld furnish them, as it has
proceeded to do. However,Moscow warned that not ahand must W laid on AntoineGizenga. in order that hemight be able to oppose "anytool* of the Rockefellers andHie Union Mimere" such as itaccused TshomW of Wing.
Since the UN has ignuredGtzenga in an attempt to
crush I shomhc, Russia seems
to have some reason to fedsatisfied.
lIIFKE ARE other reasonsfor Moscow followers to ex-
press gratification. Elizabeth
Gurley Flynn, chairman of theCommunist Party in the U. S.,gives vent to such thoughts inThe Worker. She asserts that“the present atmosphere, as
contrasted with a decadeago." is much improved forl S. communists. Despite theSupreme Court decisionagainst the American sectionol the conspiracy, enough“popular resentment" in de-fense of the Reds has W-enworked up that they can makethe decision inoperative.
In like vein, the NovemberWorld Marxist Review surveysthe world in terms of ad-
vancing communist power.The parade is led off by an
extensive review by MauriceThorcz. French Communist
Party leader, on the allegedtransformation of "the dicta-
torship of the proletariat" inRussia lo "Hie party of thewhole people" as a means lo
arouse world communists,even though With titles are
covers for Communist Partydictatorship.
WE CAN TURN to PoliticalAlfair* to discover some ofour weaknesses on which
communism hope* to profit,They are made evident by Dr.Herbert Apthckcr, editor ofthat publication, in reviews oftwo hook* written by non-com-
munists hut serving commu-
nist purposes. One is Prof. J.P. Morray's "From Yalta loDisarmament": the other t*“The Cold War and Us Ori-gins." which was written byProf. D.F. Fleming.
Such words as these tend to
persuade intellectuals thatcommunism Is the wave of thefuture because it has W*enright in the past. If wc take
Aptheker's comments at facevalue, it can be said that theyseek at every turn of Soviet-American relatiutts to "dem-onstrate" that Russia wasright and the U. S. was wrong
except when we yielded toappeasement
These hooks are but a fewin the stream of pro-Soviet“information" flooding ourWiok stores and newsstands
THE QUESTION BOX
Kir. Leo I-jrlcy, S.T.D., and Rev. Robert Hunt, S.T.D., olImmaculate Conception Seminary, Darlington, Ramsey, N. ].,arc editors of Ibe Question Box. Questions may he addressedto them there for answer in this column, or to Question Box
Editors, The Advocate, 31 Clinton Sl„ Newark 2, N.J.
Q. May a Catholic believe inthe existence of "polter-geists”?
A. The term "poltergeist" isborrowed directly from theGerman language. Its nearest
English equivalent is "hobgob-lin," that is, a mischievousspirit whose only purposeseems to be to create confu-sion or disturbance.
Poltergeist activities seemto follow a more or less defi-nite pattern. Physical objects,often of great weight, arc
thrown about or moved appar-ently in defiance of the lawsof gravity. If recent newspa-per accounts of poltergeistvisitations in the metropolitanarea arc accurate, these mis-chievous agents seem espe-
cially partial to domestic uten-
sils; dishes fly from their
resting place and shatterthemselves against the wallor floor; knives, forks, andspoons zoom heltcr skelterabout the room; and so on
with respect toany other item
that isn't nailed down.Rev. John McCarthy, who
writes for the Irish Ecclesias-tical Record, has this to sayof the poltergeist phcnomc- inon;
"WHILE WE must treatwith the greatest reserve the
accounts of poltergeist phe-nomena, and while some ofthem must be clearly dis-counted as unreliable and in-accurate, there docs seem to
be a residue of cases in re-gard lo which the evidence iswell authenticated and incon-testable.
"The late Father Thurston,who spent long years in a
deep study of the whole ques-tion, has expressed himself as
satisfied regarding the real-ity of many of the reportedpoltergeist phenomena and hehas quoted, in support of this,the statements ot many oth-ers who have closely examin-ed. and even witnessed, theextraordinary happenings insome of the better-knowncases.”
INTERESTINGLY enough,these mysterious "guests" dono physical injury to their un-fortunate "hosts"; their child-ish pranks and mischievous
behavior, however, arc wellcalculated to try the patienceof any modern-day Job.
To whom or to what are
these poltergeist activitiesdue? Although several possi-bilities suggest themselves itremains for the most part a
mystery. Disembodied souls?While it is true that the soulsof the departed have on occa-sion appeared to the living,this has always been througha special intervention of Godand for sonic very importantpurpose. It is hardly likelythat God would be sendingdisembodied spirils on so bi-zarre an errand as "crockeryhurling."
Nor is it conceivable thatHie good angels, who arc cap-_able of exercising consider-able power over material
things without any special di-
vine intervention, would beinvolved in such meaninglessbehavior.
THIS LEAVES the fallenangels. Rut even this is nottoo satisfying an answer. AsFather Thurston remarks, it
seems somewhat unreasonableto predicate of diabolic agen-cies, gifted with angelic intel-lects, the highly ridiculousactivities which arc so char-acteristic of poltergeist visita-tions.
For those readers who maywish to investigate this ques-tion further, we recommend
Father Herbert Thurston’s
book, "Ghosts and Polter-
geists.” It is now put out in
paperback form by “GatewayEditions,” Chicago.
Forty Hours
Newark
o*«. >i, miSundsr Within Oct... ol ChiltlmssI’rriH-Wist llussfv Shfinr. Hums *
Spnnsliolil A*r. summitSt AnasUsia. tool TrSlink li t .West KnotrwiHMl
S on t. mtFoosi of Mol* »amit»
SI viuniut. f irmint A*c A tin-man SI . Nossafk
SI tc.net. Hospital, as K- Hamil-ton I*l . Jrfsot t'ttj
PatersonOo< jt, mt
(mum Within Octavo ot ChristmasSsrrmt Hoars to liantlolph A*».Clifton
Xatior Chapel, t uhi.nl StationJan (. mt
Villa Walsh. Mornsloon
Jon. 1, tssiSirs! twnda. Altar (plphonv
IM> tamits, Uo,a Aso. nothamPar*
SI Joseph. Coml* ltd. UneotnHirh
3MR MarEel M s CalrtMin
InYourPrayersremember these, your deceas-
ed priests:
NewarkRev. Francis Castellano, Dec.
30, 1931Rev. Ignatius Gcbara, Jan. 1,
1929Rev. Brendan Boyle, C.P.,
Jan. 1. 1960
Rev. James F. Reid, Jan. 2,
1901Rev. Daniel F. Hogan, Jan. 2,
1931
Rev. Peter A. Boyle, Jan. 2,
1942
Rev. James W. McDowell,Jan. 3, 1913
Rev. J. Manuch Bazirganian,Jan. 4, 1922
Most Rev. Winand M. Wiggcr,Jan. 5. 1901
Rev. Gerard Funckc, Jan 5,
1908Rt. Rev. Msgr. Joseph M.
Flynn, Jan. 5, 1910
PatersonRev. John B. Bennett, Jan. 1,
1940
Mass Calendar
Dec. 31 Sunday. Sunday with*In Octave of the Nativity. 2nd Claw.White. Gl. Cr. Pref. and Communt*
cantea of Nativity.Jan 1 Monday. Octave of the
Nativity of Our l*ord lat C'laaa.
White Gl. Cr. Pref. and Communl-
cantea of Nativity.Jan. 2 Tuesday. Moat Holy
Name of Jesus. 2nd C’laaa. Whitt.Gl Cr. Pref. only of Nativity.
Jan 3— Wedneaday. Maa« aa onJan 1 4th Claaa. White. Gl 2nd
Coll. C <P). No Cr. Pref. only of.Nativity.
Jan 4 Thuraday. Maaa aa onJan 1 4th Claaa Whit#. Gl. No Cr.
Pref. of Nativity.Jan. 3— Friday. Maaa aa on Jan.
I 4th Claaa Whit#. Gl. 2nd Coll.St. Telc’phoroa; 3 C <P>. No Cr.
Pref of Nativity.
Jan 4 Saturday Epiphany nfOur Lord, lat Claaa. Whit#. Gl Cr.Pref and Communkantesof Eptpha*ny.
Jan. 7 Sunday. The Holy Fam-
ily. 2nd Claaa Whit#. Gl. Cr. Pref.
only of EpiphanyKEY: Gl. Glorias Cr. Creed: C
from the Votive Maaa of HolyGhoat: N Archdiocese of Newark. PDiocese of Patervon; Coll. CollectsPref Preface.
AROUND THE PARISH
The family is out for the evening, and even Mr.O'Brien’s favorite Western TV show can't lessen therestlessness he gets when the usually noisy house is
empty and quiet.
12 THE ADVOCATE December 28, 1961
TheAtk'o'cateOfficial Publication of the
Archdiocese of Newark and of
the Diocese of Paterson.
Most Rev. Thomas A.
Boland, S.T.D., Archbishop of
Newark.Published weekly by The Advocate
Publishina Corporation. Moat Key.Thom** A. Roland. ST D, Pres-
ident; Rt n#Y Mar. James A.
Huffhr • |» A . JC D . V.G., Vic#President. Rt. firs Msgr. James P.Looney. AM. Secretary. lU. I!»y.
Maer, Caesar M Rinaldi and Rl.
lira Macr. Paul Knappek. PA •Truatee* 3l Clinton M . .Newark 2.
N J MArkel 40700
Member of the Catnotic Press
Association anil the Internationalt nion of the Catholir Press Sub-
Mr iber to the St W.C. Newt Serv-ice
Editorial Hoard Moat Itev. MartinW Stanton. STD. PhD.; Rt Rev.Msgr. William C. Ileimbuchi Rt.Rev. Mat John J Doughertv.STL. ft HD. Very Rev. Mscr.Gearce W shea. STD; Very Ree.Mar Thomas M Reardon. LLR.Rev William J Dulls. HTI.i Rev.Hugh J FiUtimmont. Mlt t RevJames W. O'Neill; Rev WtlUara N.Field. Ml.ft ; Rev William Keller.AM . ST L; Rev Francis J. Hough-
ton. STL.Lartutive Director Rt. Rev. Msgr
John J KilevPatersonRepresentative Rev. Carl
J Wolsin. ftTI.Managing Editor Floyd Anderson*
subscription Price *4 30 yearlySecond Class postage paid at New-
ark under art of Mar 3. I«7*
Letters to the Editori (The Advocate welcomet letters to the Editor, for publicationin this column. They should be timely, signed by the writer and
brief wherever possible.) -
'
Public Schools
And Christmas
Carol Lutz,..Cedar Grove.
Editor:
The Advocate editorial,"Christmas in the PublicSchool,” suggests that intclli-Rent people should not takepart in the “paganizing pro-cess” of eliminating Christmasfrom the public school in spileof the fact that present lawsforbid celebrating the religiousaspect of it.
I recently took part in sucha process in Cedar Grovewhere a citizens committee
was formed at the request ofthe board of education to sug-gest a policy for the schools.
My position was that Christ-
mas and other religious factsof life, as important parts ofthe culture and history of west-ern civilization, should not beignored, but that religiouscarol-singing as a part of
classroom celebration is a re-
ligious, sectarian celebration
and as such is illegal in com-
munities such as Cedar Grovewhere there is a sizeable non-
Christian population . . .
I have observed small Jewishfriends and neighbors singingpraises to the little Lord Jesusfor their parents at our local
kindergarten (try explaining to
a kindergartner that he mayleave the room if his con-
science demands it) and won-
dered how Catholics could ex-
pect the public to respect their
unique (in our society) re-
ligious beliefs, especially in re-
gard to the federal aid ques-
tion, if we do not respect thebeliefs of others.
ANOTHER consideration in-fluenced my position. Won’tChristmas be relegated to the
position of Halloween if we goalong with the semi-religious,semi-pagan, sentimentalized
celebrations.And finally, this is such a
small issue in comparison to
this essential one: when re-
ligious people who don't seethe necessity for religious ed-ucation as part of the edu-cational process and who un-
derestimate the secularistthreat, realize that under pres-ent law and practice therecannot be and in fact thereis not any real religious or
moral (except in the vaguestterms) teaching in the publicschool, perhaps then they willunite in order to find a legal,just and workable solution tothis problem, as every othermodern western democracyhas done —a system of fed-erally aided separate religiousschools or separate religioncourses in the public schools.
Feast Days keptHoly by Others
Marion Hickey,Newark.
Editor:
Hearing a young lady sayshe was buying religious andcomic Christmas cards sincethey suited her friends, mademe write this letter. It mightbe too late for 1961 but per-haps it will serve for futureyears to remember that wecan borrow a lesson from ourHebrew brethren when buyingour Christmas cards.
Notice next fall, as the He-brew New Year approaches,that all their holiday cardsare holy cards and carry re-
ligious symbols and there isn'ta comic suggestion on any ofthem. Let's remember thatthere was no comedy con-nected with the birth of our
dear Lord, cither.
Another thing to rememberis the objection of certain peo-ple to Christmas carols andplays. You don't hear any ob-jections to Christmas spend-ing, do you? Why not curb our
shopping to a point where ithurts the Christmas objectors.We will save ourselves thepost-Christmas headache ofsettling Christmas debts.
Yours for putting more ofChrist into Christmas.
STRANGE BUT TRUELittle-Known Foots for CatholicsBy M. J. MURRAY OSTIUM. IW, NJC.WC. Km
God Love You
Bethlehem
RevisitedBy Bishop Fulton J. Sheen
How different are our timesfrom those of Bethlehem! Thenthe whole world was expectingGod to become man; now themood is one of man expectingman to become God. Then
both Jew and Gentile lookedforward to redemption; today,except for the loyal followersof Christ, hearts are yearningnot for salvation but for pros-perity. The star in the East
to which deluded men look isthe Soviet star, which prom-ises. as did Satan: "You will
be like unto gods.”It must not be thought, how-
ever, that all evil is on one
side of the Iron Curtain andall goodness is on the other.
Good and bad are mixed as
they were in Sodom andGomorrah, as they will be atthe Last Judgment. The pointis this: the issues are now
becoming clearer than ever
before. The struggle is be-tween the forces of the God-Man who is Christ and theMan-god who is anti-Christ.
HIT THIS IS not reason fordespair. Let us count our
blessings:1. The Church always gets
the kind of Pontiff she de-serves. The Lord must bepleased with the Church andthe faithful. otherwise Hewould never have given us
Pope John XXIII.2. The Church has had more
martyrs in the last 50 yearsthan she had in the first 300years, of her history. Themartyrs in Russia, the Congoand China are purchasing fu-ture blessings for the worldthrough their blood.
3. Our missionaries. Theirpoverty, which reflects theChrist Who had nowhere to
lay His Head; their shepherding. which makes up for toomuch emphasis on adminis-tration elsewhere in the world;and their conversions, whichoutnumber ours by 300'i inmany instances; these are
testimonials that God is withus.
HE lIKCOMK depressed be-cause we read the press toooften and the Scriptures toolittle. What makes news is con-flict. contradiction and thebreaking of the law of God;what makes peace is prayerand sacrifice. The world isbecoming worse In one di-rection. but it is becoming*>ctter in another. AlthoughChrist was denied room in theurn. the shepherds and thepeople from the East foundHim, and the angels chantedIlls glory.
He happy, therefore, inChrist. Rejoice in the spreadof the knowledge and love ofChrist m a persecuting world.Hut make your merriment con-crete. as did the Magi, bybringing gifts to Christ and HisMcar that His Name may re-sound from pole to poleWhether it be the gold ofmoney, the frankincense ofyour prayers or the myrrhof your sufferings, offer it toChrist through His Vicar onearth.
GOD LOVE YOU to Nil T.foi $l5O. “I am a TV service-
man and have received smalltips throughout the past year.Please accept them now that
someone less fortunate than1 may be free from want.”
...to Anonymous for $5.
“This is to cover the worthof an article that 1 uninten-
tionally acquired and cannot
u-turn." . . to Mr. and Mrs.P J tor $lO. "This month wecrU-brated our 50th anniver-
sary. In return for the HolyFather's blessing, we wish to
send him this offering."A quarterly review of mis-
sionary activities edited by
lii>hop Sheen, is the ideal giftfor priests, nuns, seminarians
or laymen. Send $5 for a one-
year subscription to W’orldtnis-
sion. 3tid-sth Ave., New York l.Cut out this column, pin
your sacrifice to it and address
it to Bishop Fulton J. Sheen,National Director, Society forthe Propagation of the Faith,360 Fifth Ave.. New York, or
to your diocesan director:
Bishop Martin W. Stanton. 3t
Mulberry St.. Newark, or Ut.Rev. Msgr. William F. Louis,21 DcGrasse St.. Paterson.
THE FIHST Catholic publi-catiun of a religious nature inthe U> •>. was the “UnitedStates Catholic Miscellany”established June 5, 1822.
Claims Catholic Youth
Hazy on Dating ConductBy Rev. John L. Thomas, S.J.
Assistant Professor of Sociology, St. Louis University
nrnn!®" 1 ,l. l, " lc t ' ,c
1
Church showed a little more realism in its teaching concerningPM*;? C 5 Much "f
rhat Wc ’rc to,d from hiS h on is so general
somethin*,Sttle prac‘lcal cffcct- I,cre a * college most girls think there’s
«»limL g on ! "1th a .man lf he doesn,t tfy to neck or pet, and though they won’t
hn if,! " they re,?nighty arb,trary about where they draw the line? I’m not put-ting all the blame on them, but shouldn’t Catholic couples be given some clear-cutobjective standards to guide them?
1 given some clear cut,
Considering several recentstudies on the values andideals of American youth, I
think we must all agree thatCatholic young people todaystand in special need of thor-ough instruction and trainingconcerning acceptable Chris-tian sexual conduct. The Cath-olic viewpoint receives no sup-port in a secular society thatregards the use of sex as a
matter of personal option asvoid of moral significance as
long as it is voluntary.Although dating customs and
practices based on this im-moral attitude must be whol-ly objectionable to Catholics,they have been introduced so
casually and have becomesuch an integral part of thetotal pattern of premarital re-
lationships that many Catho-lics seem unaware of theirmoral implications.
SUCH LACK of awarenessis revealed by Catholic par-ents who promote or tolerate
early dating among theiryoungsters while stubbornlyrefusing to give them ade-quate instructions or to super-vise their premature cross-sex
relationships.As you have suggested,
Paul, it also appears amongthose religious leaders andteachers who fail to analyzethe social environment towhich young people arc ex-
posed and consequently con-
fine their teaching to vague
generalities or negative warn-ings.
But it is also evident amongCatholic couples of college age
when they thoughtlessly followsecular patterns of sexual con-
duct. on the pretext that
they're not really sure whatthe Church teaches in regardto such practices.
YOUR REQUEST for more
realism in the Church’s teach-ing on dating conduct lendsitself to two different interpre-tations. Paul. First, you mayhe implying that the Church’sdoctrine on dating conduct,that is. the relevant moral
principles. standards, and
norms, has not been adequate-ly developed by moral theolo-gians; or, second, that a sat-
isfactory understanding of thisdoctrine and its practical im-
plications is not being com-
municated to Catholic youth.I think your emphasis falls
primarily on the second, butboth merit some considera-tion.
IN' REGARD to the first,the pertinent Catholic moral
principles have hern clearlydefined. Briefly, it is seriouslysinful for the unmarried to
knowingly and deliberatelyarouse and/or enjoy venereal
pleasure cither in themselvesor in others. Broadly speakingvenereal pleasure is the dis-tinctive pleasure normally ex-
perienced during the excita-tion or functioning of the re-
productive system.lienee it is sinful for the un-
married to engage In the ob-
viously stimulating actions us-
ually called ''pelting.” Rou-
tine displays of affection such
as kissing and embracing also
may become highly stimulat-
ing cither because they arc
prolonged or because of the
manner in which they are per-formed, and for the unmar-ried to use them in this wayis clearly forbidden.
SECOND, YOU are correctin inferring that this doctrinelias not been adequately com-
municated to Catholic youth.
Parents, teachers, and reli-gious leaders frequently for-get that the above moral prin-ciples "make sense” only interms of a real understandingand appreciation of the posi-tive qualities of human sexual-ity.
Their negative approach oft-en leaves the impression thatthey are condemning sex rath-er than its misuse. Further,there is a good deal of buck-
passing in teaching youngpeople about sex. Religiousleaders insist it is primarilythe parents’ job, parents wantthe teachers to do it, andteachers cither maintain it isnot their function or cannot
agree when and how It is tobe taught.
YET TIIE SOLUTION in-volves more than the ade-quate teaching of Catholic val-
ues and norms. Because our
society does not accept theCatholic viewpoint on sex, theentire patterning of pre-man-tal cross-sex relationshipscurrently in vogue simply ig-nores the practical implica-tions of Catholic doctrine inthis area.
Although young peoplereach puberty in their earlyteens and are not socially pre-pared for marriage until their
early 20s, a system of early,intimate and relatively unsu-
pervised heterosexual associa-tions is eagerly promotedor thoughtlessly tolerated
throughout all stratas of so-
ciety.
IF CATHOLIC young peopleconform to this system, mere
knowledge of moral principlewill not assure their observ-
ance. It has always been as-
sumed without question thatthe observance of chastitynecessarily involved reason-
able avoidance of the occa-
sions of sin.In short, we certainly need
more adequate teaching of ba-
sic moral principles, but even
this will prove of little value
if we fail to develop a more
rational social life for our
Catholic young people.
December 2R, Iflfil THE ADVOCATE 13
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(B.ir?copyright 19(1 145 ROUTE 4. PARAMUS. NEW JERSEV
Congratulations to
the Religious and laity
whose fervent and
unending support
makes it possible
for The Advocate
to celebrate its
10th Anniversary.
it has been our endeavor,
through the years,
to produce the ultimate
in the physical appearance
of The Advocate.
We will continue our efforts
in the years to come.
THE MATTIA PRESS
MUtVIUJ. N. J.
to last week's issue...
From the first issue
14 the advocate December 28, 1961
The Advocate: Highlights of 10 YearsBy Anne Mae BuckleyIt was dawn in the city when
the two men said ‘‘Good
night,” outside the 12-story of-fice building the chill graydawn of December in the year1951. The two men, Rev. JohnJ. Kiley and Floyd Anderson,had worked through the nightin the office building so thatthe first issue of the newspa-
per of the Archdiocese of New-ark might appear with the
date, Dec. 30, 1951.
It did. And for 520 weekssince, it has appeared. AndThe Advocate reaches a mile-stone: its tenth anniversary.
Floyd Anderson is The Advo-cate’s first managing editor.
Father Kiley, now Monsignor,is its executive director. But
the work they were doing thatDecember night was strangeto such titles. They were fil-ing mailing plates so that TheAdvocate's charter subscriberswould receive the maiden is-sue of the new diocesan week-
ly —and setting a pace of
dedicated service to The Advo-cate which would be admiredand followed by others in thefuture.
THE PRESS RUN for thefirst issue was 46,032. Lastweek it was 123.237.
The first issue went intohomea in the four counties ofthe Newark Archdiocese;since October, 1953, whenBishop McNulty acceptedArchbishop Boland's invitationto make The Advocate the of-ficial paper of the Paterson
Diocese, it has gone into seven
North Jersey counties.In 1953 the Complete Parish
Coverage plan of circulation
was inaugurated. Since then 52
Newark parishes and all 84Paterson parishes have adopt-ed the plan under which allregistered families of the par-ish receive The Advocate.
The Advocate is now thelargest weekly in the state,and the third largest newspa-per.
The Advorate has in itsportfolio Catholic Press Asso-ciation awards—for attaining,in its second year, the rankof "Newspaper of Distinction''among the more than 100 dio-
cesan weeklies in the nation:for excellence in the categoryof human interest featurestories; and for campaigns Inthe public interest (againstSunday shopping).
The staff is now composedof 22 lay people. Including sev-
en writer-editors. Its editorislhoard includes 13 priests;from its membership have
come two Bishops, two semi-
nary rectors, a universitypresident.
Headquarters of The Advo-cate was a suite of three
rooms on the ninth floor ofSeton Hall University's down-
town college; now, Seton Hallhas designated an entire 16-
room wing to accommodatethe paper's expanded staff andactivities.
THE ADVOCATE has come
a long way since that grayDecember morning, and Msgr.Kiley and Floyd Andersonneed no longer work throughthe night at sorting mailingplate*. But the fact that theywould if It became necessaryIs a key In the spirit of thepeople who serve The Advo-cate. and an index to its his-tory.
The Advocate ws* the sec-ond Catholic weekly in NewJersey, preceded a very shorttimo by the Star Herald ofthe Camden Diocese, and fol-lowed several years later byThe Monitor of Trenton. It was
the late Archbishop Walsh whomade the decision to inaugu-
rate a newspaper, his auxili-
ary. Bishop McNulty, now Or-
dinary of Paterson, who di-rected its beginnings and was
it* first president, and Msgr
Kiley who made the initialstudies—of costs, techniques of
distribution, and personnel.
THE NAME of the new pa-per was explained in the first
issue, and a handpainted and
illuminated copy of the ex-
planation composed by Msgr.itlien Rev.) John J. Dougher-ty, bangs m the conference
room of the The Advocate'soffices Christ, the Holy Spir-it. and Mary have all beencalled •'advocate." which
means one who pleads a
cause, one who defends or
vindicates a cause, or one whointercedes. (Text on Page 23)
The first issue contained a
letter to Archbishop Walshfrom the Vatican extendingthe Apostolic Blessing of thelate Pope Plus XU to the
Archbishop, directors, staffand readers of The Advoeate.
THE FIRST ISSUE was
preceded by the first of to
subscription crusades, con-
ducted by school children of
the archdiocese under direc-tion of their teachers. Thefirst crusade, during which (he
youngsters were selling an in-
tangible —a newspaper thatdid not yet exist broughtin 27.339 subscriptions,
it was a time of newsprintshortages and rumors that
publications would be allowed
no more paper after a quota
had been reached. In the hopethat initiating publication in1951 might insure newsprint al-lotments, the founders strug-gled to meet deadlines for theDec. 30, 1951, first issue.
Another newsprint problemin 1956 when a shortage
was complicated by weatherdelays forced The Advocateto publish its smallest edition.Rather than miss a single is-sue, The Advocate came outwith six pages, and no ad-vertising.
FOR 10 YEARS, The Advo-cate has carried the completetext of every available Papalstatement and encyclical a
Policy in which it is uniquein the Catholic press.
The Advocate’s campaignsin the public interest haveproduced impressive results.The campaign against Sundayshopping was instrumental inprocuring Sunday closing or-dinances in 12 counties (andby refusing to accept adsfrom Sunday-opencrs the pa-per suffered a loss of an es-timated $125,000 a year In ad-vertising revenue). The cam-
paign against burlesque helpedabolish it in the two cities thathad burlesque houses. A euth-anasia group was exposed inThe Advocate’s pages. A vig-orous battle on obscenity inprint, still being waged, hassucceeded in arousing publicopinion and lending support toincreased activity by law en-
forcement agencies.
IN 1954, to observe the cen-tennial of the Newark Arch-diocese and the opening of Sa-cred Heart Cathedral, The Ad-vocate published its first spe-cial supplement —a 40 pagetabloid insert with a four-colorcover featuring an originalwatercolor of the cathedral.
In early 1958 special supple-ments became a regular fea-ture.
Since then a building supple-ment and Christmas supple-ment have been annual. In1959 an annual hack-to-srhool
Issue was added. From timeto time other snerial l««it*«
arc compiled on hospitals,on vocations, etc.
The face of The Advocatehas changed considerablythrough the years —most re-
cently with the adoption ofindented columns withoutcolumn rules in an endeavorto present a more attractive,more readable appearance.
WHILE EXPANDING, thestaff has also changed throughth<) years. The newest changeis the one accompanied bythe most nostalgia: this willoccur when Thr Advocate’sfirst managing editor. FloydAnderson, leaves to become
managing editor of The Reg-ister chain of Catholic week-lies. Succeeding him will bethe only other member of theoriginal editorial staff, JosephR. Thomas.
Among the major losses suf-fered by The Advocate havebeen the deaths of its firstvice president. Msgr. John C.McClary, and three editorialhoard members: Msgr. Wil-liam A. Lawlor, Msgr. JosephH. Brady, and Msgr. John J.Tierney. Another board mem-
ber, Bishop Curtis, left lastmonth to become Bishop ofBridgeport. A poignant event
for the staff was the death in1959 of The Advocate's first
advertising manager, A. E.Wcingartcn.
BIT MANY THINGS re-
main the same: the locationin the Seton Hall building; theprinter. Mattia Press. Belle-ville; five of its original edi-torial board members: BishopStanton, Msgr. Dougherty,Msgr. George W. Shea. Msgr.Kiley, and Bev. William N.Field.
And still the same arc thegoals of The Advocate as
presented in the first issue,10 years ago. An editorial Dec.30. 1951. summed them upthis way:
"It will be the aim of TheAdvocate to make its readers
happy by presenting truth.’For a happy life,’ accordingto St. Augustine, 'll Joy id
the truth'."
EDITING: A newspaper story mayoriginate in an interview, a wire serv-
ice release, a phone call. But its des-tination is always the editor’s desk.Here Floyd Anderson, managing edi-
tor, closely checks a piece of copy for
accuracy, style, etc.
RESEARCH: A good story sometimes begins —andoften ends —with research. Here Joseph R. Thomas,who will succeed Floyd Anderson as managingeditor next month, seeks background material in the"morgue” with the assistance of Rosemarie Brodeur,
librarian.
CONFERENCE: The editorial board meets monthly for planning and assignment ofeditorials. At such a session are from left, Msgr. John J. Kiley Rev William J.Duffy, Rev. William Keller, Msgr. Thomas M. Reardon, Msgr. William C. Heim-buch, Bishop Stanton, Rev. James W. O’Neill, Msgr. John J. Dougherty’ MsgrGeorge W. Shea, Rev. William N. Field. Rev. Hugh J. Fitzsimmons and Rev. Fran-
cis J. Houghton.
PRODUCT: Off the presses
comes the newest issue of
The Advocate.
MAILING: Your address plate may be among those being fed by Mae Patersoninto the labeling machine operated by Horace Smith as Allen C. Bradley, circulationmanager, looks on. Labels are attached to copies as they come from the press.
THE HOOKS: A newspaper’s book-keeping is a complicated operationwhich must keep track of millions oflines of advertising and thousands ofsubscribers. Maria Lundy, left, is incharge of the accounting system of
The Advocate, assisted by MaureenJones.
PROMOTION: Planning and imagina-tion are required to get and keep the
advertising lineage that helps payprinting, mailing and other operatingcosts. Planning a presentation for a
prospective client are Richard A. Mil-
ler, advertising manager, and Peter
Confalone, assistant.
SELLING: Display and classified ad salesmen are busy by phone and on foot withThe Advocate’s widespread territory, the seven counties ’of North Jersey. Fromleft are Leo Carroll, John Candido, Richard Brown and Robert Braun. Not shown
is Edward Convery.
PROOFREADING: Afterthe copy is set in type itis read and corrected againfor the printer’s errors.
Above, Antoinette Tom-anelli reads galley proofs.Stories will be read againin page proofs on press
night.
MAKEUP: Galley proofs are cut and pasted to pagedummies to guide the printer in composing a page oftype and cuts. June Dwyer, editor of the women’sand children’s pages, and Ed Woodward, sports and
youth editor, “make up” pages.
SPECIAL MATERIAL: Asa weekly, The Advocateemphasizes the feature rather than the "spot" phaseof the news, and publishes several special issues eachyear. Here, Ed Grant, news editor, and Anne MaeBuckley, feature editor, discuss art work for the re-
cent Christmas Supplement.
PHOTOS: Staff photographer Dan Zehnder seems
pleased with his shot as he checks a negative in thodarkroom.
HeAdvocate15 December 28, 1961
Savings Accountsof
Church, Educational, Benevolent
and Charitable Organizations
RECEIVE MORE INCOMEby our new method of Interest Payment
InterestPaidfrom Bay ofDeposit—compounded quarterlyInterest on Withdrawalsis paidto the first
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remaining in the account is *lO,OOO or more.
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BEGINNING JANUARY 1, 1962
To open such accounts in any amount Call our Special Service Department
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MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION
AHAPPY NEW YEAR
NEW YEAR
By June DwyerHere comes another year
the same old thing \vc hadlast year at this time. Whatkind of a year will it be, thisbrand new package of 365days?
It could be the same oldstory all over again. Youknow, the getting up in the
morning when you arc so tir-ed, the long hours of strug-gling over math problems that
you arc sure you will never
get, the same old celebrationslike the Fourth of July, birth-
days, even another Christmas.
IT WILL probably mean
more defeats on the basket-ball court and you will haveto dry dishes at least 365
times.It means you will have to
get up at least 58 morningsto go to Mass more morn-
ings if you want to be reallyclose to God. It means youhave 365 days when you mightbe lonely, might not feel well,
might have to fight for what
you believe in. might face
strong temptations, might not
have even one dream come
true.
BUT THEN again thismight be Ihe year that you oFfer getting up in the morningfor the Poor Souls. It could hethe year that you finally lickmath and it makes sensemight even be the victory thatmakes you decide to he a
scientist and help make this abetter world to live in.
This might be the year thatyou get that lump in yourthroat on the Fourth of Julyas the meaning of Americacomes alive to you in anew
way or that your birthdavmakes you appreciate what itmeans to be born into yourspecial family and to have
been given a body and a soulby God_ .
Even Christmas might heyour happiest Christmas yet.It could be the year that theChrist Child rests so complete-ly in the stable of your heartthat He remains'there foreverand ever as your guiding Star.
It might mean that you be-come a better person for los-
ing those basketball gamesor, who knows, you could havean undefeated season. At leastyou’re getting a chance to try.
WONDER of wonders, itcould mean a dish drier or
you will finally find the clue
to satisfying adults all of thetime.
It could mean that you willgrow to love God more andmore and that you will makeclose friends who will keepyou from being lonely, thatyou will be stronger than youever were, that you will con-vince others of your true be-
liefs, that you will overcome
temptations, that all of yourdreams will come true.
Here it comes —another
year. Yours for the tryingyours for the dreaming. MayGod help you to make it thebest year yet.
Happy New Year!
IN SANTA’S NAME: Mrs. Frank T. Keogh of West-field. president of the Oratory Mother's Club, Summit,presented a cheek for $3,400 to Rev. John J. Bain,headmaster (center), at a recent Mothers’ Club meet-
ing. Looking on was Rev. John J. Gcarin, principal.The funds were raised at a November luncheon.
Priest BuildingA Model City
BOGOTA, Colombia (NC)A model "Christian city" inwhich new hrirk homes cost
51.430. payable at $l5 a month,is being bfiill here by a priestwho calls himself a "socialadventurer."
The project is the brain-child of Hcv. Kafacl Garcia
Herreros. who aggressive-ly promotes it on his popularradio program, "God's Min-ute"
Father Garcia's city alreadyhas 2no homes, with room
for I.H-Hi more, on a site do-nated by a large landowner.
The residents serve as their
own volunteer police force.
There is a cooperative groc-
ery. bakery, carpenter’s shop,library, clinic and factory, as
well as grade and highschools.
ADDIE SAYS: We will an-
nounce the winners in thejunior division of the YoungAdvocate Christmas contest innext week's issue of The Ad-vocate. Senior winners will beannounced in the Jan. 4 issueand anew contest Jan. 11.
Xavier’s Body
Stays in GoaLISBON (NC) A govern-
ment spokesman has said Por-
tugal will leave the body ofSt. Francis Xavier in its shrine
in Goa, Portuguese enclave
forcibly absorbed by India.
"St. Francis Xavier is In In-
dia and will remain there with
Portugal until the end." Min-ister of State Jose Correia de
Oliveira said. He was answer-
ing a query whether Portugal
intended to remove the bodyof St. Francis from its restingplace.
Portuguese crowded church-
es throughout the country to
pray for Goa and the Portu-
guese troops and civiliansthere.
Christmas Presents to
500 Loneliest PriestsLONDON (NC) The 5M
loneliest priests in Britain,most of whom spent Christmasalone in some smalt town,rural village or bleak hamlet
in the Scottish or Welsh hills,
were sent a hamper of goodcheer in the way of fowl,drink and unusual luxurici byreaders of the Universe, na-
tional Catholic newspaper.
A RINGING CHRISIMAS: The Knights Of the Altar of St. Michael’s Monasteryparish, Union City, received a rather unusual Christinas gift this year from thepastor, Rev. Alfred Weaver, C.P., and the moderator, Rev. Bede Engle, C.P. Eachof the 26 knights received an alarm clock as "an expression of gratitude for theirfaithful service at the altar, but especially to instill in each boy a true spirit ofresponsibility. Pictured with Father Engle, left to right, are: Mark Levins, GaryZucatto, Raymond Martin and Gregory Reynolds.
16 T HE ADVOCATE December 28, 19G1
MINTEREST
ON
1 YEAR
SAVINGS CERTIFICATES
EFFECTIVE
JANUARY 1,1962
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National State
Salutes
The Advocate
on its
10th Anniversary
Tht
national stats bankOF NEWARK
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Congratulations & Best Wishes
To The AdvocateFOR 10 YEARS OF OUTSTANDING
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FROM
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CONGRATULATESTHE ADVOCATEupon the completion of your
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Catholic Press First
Honored With Contest
By Young AdvocatesHEADQUARTERS Who started the whole business of
mning. Winnmg prizes in the Young Advocate Club Contest
SS* ,s ' We tu ™ cd thc rccords in Club headquarters back to thefirst year and came up with some interesting statisticsThe first contest was called thc Catholic Press Contest and
was introduced in the Jan. 2G, 1952 issue. (Thc Children's pagewas introduced into the paper Jan. 12, 1952.) The boys andgir s were asked to write a letter in 100 words or less on theCatholic Press and how we could help to spread it and its mes-sage to others.
PHILIP Monetti, a sixth grader from St. Paul's, Irvingtoncame up with the top letter. He wrote:
“There arc many ways of spreading thc Catholic Press. Theway I am telling about is by sending papers and magazinesto fighting boys at the front, by buying a subscription and ad-dressing it to wherever they arc. When the paper arrives at thefront thc boy will read it and pass it on.
“Thc Catholic Press has food for thought for everyone solet’s feed our service men the right kind of food so they'll re-
turn healthy in mind and spiritually strengthened."(This letter was written during the Korean War, thus the
reference to servicemen.)
JOHN NUGENT of Our Lady of Mt. Carmel, Tcnafly, won thcsecond prize award of $3 and Beverly J. Zbuska of BlessedSacrament, Newark, took thc third place check of $2. Therewere also 10 honorable mentions named.
Since thc Young Advocate Club's founding there have been76 contests. Even Addic and the efficient tabulating machinecould not accurately record the number of members in thc clubsince some leave each year through graduation and others move
away, but we can estimate that we have received over 75,000entries over thc years.
Thc Christmas contest of Christmas cards and letters to thcChrist Child usually brings in thc most entries and has gone as
high as 2,400.
Future plans to make you oneof our friends and perhapstome day cjne of our winners.
Ten Years With You
Remembering Is Half the FunDo you remember thc year
we had gingerbreak cookies as
extra treats for thc contest or
thc time we couldn't find thc
names of our winners? There
are so many memories of thcYoung Advocate Club and ofthe young people of North
Jersey.Thoughts tnat come par-
ticularly to mind arc of: theCivics Clubs that are affiliated
with thc Catholic University ofAmerica and the good theydo;
The poetry contest sponsoredlocally by thc Catholic Daugh-
ters of America and of thenumber of students who par-ticipate each year.
The Dominic Savio Club thatis nationwide, though it startedright here in North Jersey;
THE ARCHDIOCESAN highschool entrance exam that was
started in 1960 and of how ex-
cited and interested our eighth
graders arc in it and in get-ting an education;
Thc vocation rallies wherethe boys and girls get downto brass tacks with religiouson what they will do with theirfutures;
The cooperation we receivedfrom so many of you when we
were taking pictures and writ-ing stories for our Lives of thcSaints scries;
THE INTRODUCTION ofAddic, our Young AdvocateClub mascot, in the Oct. 26.1957, issue of Thc Advocateand her funny antics since. Oh,and thc parties we have forher each year on her birth-day;
The apples that Young Ad-vocates sent us as part oftheir entries ih the favor con-
test;Eve Ferct of Sacred Heart.
Irvington, who won our con-
tests three times, always sent
in her entry and then went on
to do us proud by winning a
scholarship to ArchbishopWalsh High School.
THE O’CONNELS of St.Cassian's, Upper Montclair,who always seem to have a
winner in thc subscriptiondrive;
Thc Interview with PatO'Brien when he told you that
you were thc hope of Ameri-
ca;
The trip to Camp Christ thc
King run by thc CYO to visitRichard Doyle and DavidSamuel who were our first
camp contest winners;Thc letters of thanks we re-
ceive from our winners;Meeting thc many adults
who rush into the office with
your entries so they won't belate;
The thousands of entries wehave to wade through to findour contest winners;
THE HOURS of work thatour boys and girls put into theentries they send to us;
A letter to thc Christ Childfrom a boy who begged God to
keep him from becoming a
juvenile delinquent;Thc thrill of reading your
beautiful thoughts in our con-
tests;The joy of working with
you, thc youth of North Jersey,thc hope of America and ofthe Church.
DID YOU KNOW: ThcYoung Advocate Club has hadfour directors since its found-ing in thc first year of publi-cation: Sally Ann Gasscrt.now on thc staff of American
Builder; Anne Mae Buckley,present feature editor of TheAdvocate; Anne Luckcmicr,public relations director of thc
College of St. Elizabeth; andJune Dwyer, current women'sand children's editor.
PAST AND FUTURE: Philip Monetti (left), first win-
ner of the first Young Advocate Club contest, tooktime out from his studies at Seton Hall University to
give a future Young Advocate, George Collins of Irv-ington, a few tips on making money., Philip's $5 first
place check 10 years ago was his first earning.
Winner ofFirst Advocate Prize
Heading for Seton Hall DegreeIRVINGTON
- It has onlybeen 10 years since a sixthgrader from St. Paul's wrotehis prize winning first placeletter, but thc boy has alreadygrown into a man of consid-erable achievement. Let'stake a look at thc life of Phil-ip Monetti of St. Paul’s, thcfirst winner of a Young Advo-cate Club prize.
"Winning that contest was
very important to me." saidPhilip at Seton Hall Universitywhere he is presently a sen-ior. “To me, it proved that an
ordinary person can win. I al-ways thought a contest was
something that someone elsealways won."
THE TALL, dark-hairedsenior recalled that one Fri-day afternoon during his sixthgrade class his teacher, SisterBernadette, had thc wholeclass sit down and write a let-ter for the contest. He natur-
ally never expected that hisidea to send subscriptions toservicemen would be a win-
ner (See letter this page).“I was disappointed in the
next contest, though,” Philiplaughed. “I thought sure Iwould win again and again."
THE YOUNG Advocatecheck was thc first moneythat Philip had earned but helearned soon that the magicof money would have to behis. When he was in thc eighthgrade his father died and hehad to help with funds for thcfamily which now includes hismother, a 12-ycar-old brotherat St. Paul's, and an 18-ycar-old brother at Newark Collegeof Engineering.
Philip first turned to sellingChristmas cards, then moved
up to a summer job at theshore when he was 14 and 15,and finally worked in hisuncle's drug store at the sodafountain on vacations and aft-er school.
Thc bright young business
man is presently campusmanager for a pot and pancompany where he earnedhimself a 5400 scholarship thispast summer by selling over$lO,OOO in merchandise. It was
also while going door to dooras a salesman for this com-
pany that he met the girl heis presently dating.
Philip is an economics maj-or at Seton Hall. He is in the
ROTC, thc Pershing Rifles,the Alpha Kappa Psi (business
fraternity) and participates in
intramural football. He is a
cadet captain in thc ROTCand recently won thc Distin-
guished Military Studentaward which lie shared withonly 15 other boys on the en-
tire campus.A graduate of St. Benedict's
Prep, our first winner will beserving with thc infantry uponhis graduation from SetonHall.
WE ASKED Philip if he had
anything to pass on to the oth-er younger Club.mcmbcrs. liesaid: “Thc thing that bothersme most today is .religion.Most people today feel that
religion is a weakness andthat to be religious and con-
scientious is weak. What theydon't seem to realize is thatthis is thc strongest asset a
person can have.
“But people don't want tothink about God,” he contin-ued. “They are so engrossedin thc pleasures of life thatthey only take time to think of
religion when things arc taken
away from them, as in time ofwar. They only turn to Godwhen they think they needHim.”
WE ALSO asked Philip iflie were worried about the fu-ture his future and the fu-ture of all of the Young Advo-cates. He said: “No. Man isnot big enough to destroyhimself.”
And so, Young Advocates,you have met the “leader" of
our Club. He has shown youin just 10 years an example ofhard work, study, belief inGod, and love of country.J.V.D.
Hail the Winners!YOUNG ADVOCATE HEADQUARTERS - It wasn’t an
easy task —but we've found them! We’ve found the honorschools of the past 10 years in thc Young Advocate Club!
Heading thc list of top award winners is St. Joseph’s, Lin-coln Park, followed closely by St. Aloysius, Jersey City, and OurLady Queen of Peace, Maywood.
Wo found our top schools by allotting points to each ofthem for winning a contest or for an honorable mention. Eachfirst place position earned five points; each second placeearned four points; each third place earned three points. Anhonorable mention was worth one point.
THE 10 schools in follow up position were: St. Peter’s,River Edge; St. Francis Xavier, Newark; Our Lady of Mt.Carmel. Bayonne; St. Joseph’s. Paterson; St. Bartholomew’s,Scotch Plains; St. Philip’s, Clifton; Holy Cross, Harrison; OurLady of Mt. Virgin, Garfield; Sacred Heart, Vailsburg, Newark'and Sacred Heart, Bloomfield.
December 28, 1961 THE ADVOCATE 17
Camp St. John’sA Lakeside Mountain Camp
6oy« 6-14, 2,300 ft. alt. Sandy b.ach an Hunttr lak., N. Y. 100 mil.. from
N.Y.C. Mod.rn building., lavatory in ooch cabin. Hot thowar*. Exc.ll.nt m.oli.
Div.r.ifi.d activiti.t racraational and intlrumantal. Matura, profauional t.ach.nand coach., from top-ranking call.g*. and
pr.p ichaatt. On. coum.llor for
avtry four bay.. J.iult Chaplain. On. all-inclu.iv. f... R.command.d by Good
Haut.k.aping, Catalog.Writ. Rob.rt X. Gi.g.ngack, Yal. Univ. Alhl.lic At.n't, N.w Hav.n, Conn., or
Rhon. OR.gen 7-4566 (N.Y.CJ; Vall.y Str.am 5-1838 (long bland).
(OT
SA SiHa
ftXWar rowers
will be sure to please
during the Holiday Sea-
son. Consult The Advo-
cate Florist Column
when ordering flowers.
MORRIS COUNTY
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Terminal • SSIO*•». MUlbtrry 4 4)47
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1011 Ring wood Av., Wanaquo NJ.Tlmplt S-4))| TBmplo 5 1)4)
WITTMAN'S FLOWER SHOP14)J Van Houton Avt„ Clifton
OR 3-7910
UNION COUNTY
GARDEN STATE FLORIST
047 NEWARK AVI.lIIIAIITH. N. J.
it iron
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FLOWERS TELEGRAPHED
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VISIT
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THE THANK A. McGRIDE COMPANYHECHAHKAL KMTMCTOBS
CONGRATULATES
E
N
GI
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R
S
THE ADVOCATEon the occasion of its
10th ANNIVERSARY
PLUMBING HEATING
Industrial Layouts, Power Piping, Air Conditioning
Insulation, Fabricators of Piping and Sheet Metal
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ARmory 8-123475 SPRING STREET ESTABLISHED 1898 PATERSON, N. J.
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TO THE STAFF
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BEST WISHES
ON
YOUR
10th ANNIVERSARY!
FittST I NATIONAL BANKOFJEHSEY CITY
feCe/»l Beweit l*wrMM Co/pontiw • recent leum tntM
Main Office: One Exchange Place, Jersey City...and nine other convenient offices in
Jersey City, Hoboken, West New York, Harrison and Kearny
Jersey Girls Placed in Who’s Who
LAKEWOOD Three youngwomen from North Jersey are
among the seniors of GeorgianCourt College listed in the1961-62 directory of "Who’sWho Among Students in Amer-ican Colleges and Universi-ties.” Chosen for the honor arc
Cecilia Birdsall, Short Hills;Barbara Coyle, Jersey City;and Barbara Marcino, Linden.
Miss Birdsall, graduate of
Millburn High School, is ma-
joring in merchandising and
rninoring in French. MissCoyle, graduate of St. Michael
High School, Union City, is an
elementary education majorand a French minor; whileMiss Marcino, alumna of Mt.St. Mary Academy, North
Plainfield, is mathematics ma-
jor and physics minor at
Georgian Court.
North Jersey Date Book
DEC. 28
St. Paul of the Cross Rosary, Jersey City
Christinas party, school hall, 8 p.m.; tableau
of Joyful mysteries by children of members.
Mrs. Allan Mcadus, Mrs. Patricia Stabile,chairmen. Collection of gifts for the aged.
JAN. 3
Holy Name Hospital Central Auxiliary, Tea-
neck Meeting of auditing committee, 10
a.m., hospital auditorium. Regular meeting
and installation of officers, 1:45 p.m., hos-
pital auditorium.St. John Rosary, Guttenberg Installation of
officers, school hall, 8 p.m.; meeting.
JAN. 8
Holy Trinity Rosary, Westfield Meeting, 8
p.m.; program on books and literature.
JAN. 9
St. Rose College, New Jersey Alumnae Meet-ing. home of Mrs. James Coughlin, Hohokus.8:30.
Regina Mundi Guild, Christ the King, NewVernon Meeting, parish hall, 8 p.m.; speak-er on North American Wildlife Foundation.
JAN. 11
Court Patricia, CDA, Maplewood Twenty-fifth anniversary dinner, Essex House, New-ark.
JAN. 13
St. Elizabeth’s College Alumnae Welcomingof class of 1962 to alumnae; Communionbreakfast, alumnae lounge. Mrs. Justin J.Murphy, chairman; Mary McKeon, nationalpresident, presiding.
HOLIDAY SURPRISE: Students of Our Lady of Mt. Virgin, Garfield, received an
extra holiday treat when they heard that their bi annual magazine, Virginette hadwon first place in the Bergen County CYO journalism contest. The magazine willnow be entered in the archdiocesan finals. Celebrating the event above, left to right,are: Theresa Meskis, editor; Rev. Charles P. Casserly, pastor; Denis Scro, art editor;
and Sister Mary Garozzo, moderator.
Mothers Club Closes Year
With Check in ElizabethELIZABETH The Bender
Memorial Academy Mothers'
Club made a Christmas pre-sentation to Sister Florence,academy principal, at theholiday party held recentlyfor the children. Mrs. George
Vosslcr, club president, gaveSister Florence a $7OO check.
The school children enter-
tained at the celebration as
did the mothers who sang■carols. Mrs. Kenneth Conwaywas chairman.
St. Margaret's, Morristown
The Mothers' Guild will
meet Jan. 2 at 8 p.m. in the
school hall. Mrs. AnthonyBayland will discuss the role
or Girl Scouting at St. Mar-
garet's.Don Rosro, Ramsey The
Mothers’ Guild of the highschool has announced the an-
nual calendar party will beheld Jan. 27 In the school.The event, whieh annuallydraws about 1.000 persons, is
under the direction of Mrs.Rose Taschler of East Ruther-
ford.
Nursing School
To Have BridgeELIZABETH - The Student
Organization of St. Elizabeth
Hospital School of Nursing will
sponsor a card party at its ed-ucational center Jan 19 Thecommittee for this affair in-cludes Patricia Ann Kelly and
Evelyn Heston, class of 1903.and Eleanor Ivano and Ei-leen Domlri. class of 19*4
Felicians Plan
Buffalo CollegeBUFFALO (NO—Construc-
tion is scheduled to begin in
May, 1962. on a Catholic wom-
en's college in Cbecktowaga. a
Buffalo suburb.
The four-year college will beconducted by the Immaculate
Heart of Mary province of theKelician Sisters. Sister MaryAnnette. Provincial Superiorand future president of the
college, said It will accommo-
date 3*» students.
NCCW Leader
Dies in Bronx
BRONX, N. Y - MargaretI.ynrh. executive secretary ofthe National Council of Cath-olic Women from 1924 to iw«.died Dec 23 in the FrancesSetters irr Home and Hospitalhere at the age of 91
The bolder of the Pro Ee-clesia el Ponlifice award from
pope Pius XII. Mi»* Lynchbad served as a teacher, a
principal and a lawyer in
practice with her bruthcr.State Supreme Court Jusuee
Humphrey J. LynchShe it survived by two broth-
ers. Cornelius T. and John J.
Lynch of Geneva, N.Y.
St. E’s Ball
CONVENT - The senior* of
the College of St Elizabethwill hold their ball Jan 2 atthe Hotel Pierre. New York.
Evelyn Dankamc* of New
Brunswick i* chairman
St. E’s to Hear
Musical Trio
CONVENT- The Nicuw
Amsterdam Trio will presenta program of classical, roman-
tic. and modern music for the
students, faculty, and friendsof the College of St. Elizabeth
here Jan. 4 at 8 p.m. in Xav-ier Auditorium.
The program will feature se-
lections from the French andRomantic Periods and thework of such modern compos-ers as Shostakovich, Martinu,Piston, and Ives.
Members of the trio arc Jo-
seph Rabushka, violinist;Jascha Bemstcin, ’cellist, andEdith Mocsanyi. pianist.
THE SPIRIT OF GIVING: Thomas Gallagher, public relations, Bayway Refinery(right), presented a $2,000 check from Esso Education Foundation to Sister Hilde-
garde Mane president of the College of St. Elizabeth, as William F. Tonne, collegedevelopment director, looked on. The gift will be used as part of the college’s con-tribution toward the student loan program established under provisions of the Na-tional Defense Education Act. Students of the college are borrowing as much as
$60,000 this year to finance their education.
18 THE ADVOCATE December 28, 1961
AT FIRST NATIONAL...
1962 JANUARY 1962
IMTW T F S
DEPOSITS MADE ON OR
BEFORE JANUARY 10
WILL DRAW INTEREST
FROM JANUARY 1!
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Congratulationsand
Best Wishes. . .
To The Advocate on the occasion of your
sTenth Anniversary.
We wish to take this opportunity to thank all
those who have called upon NEWARK MONU-
MENT CO. for their monument needs throughoutthe year.
YOU ARE INVITED
to viiif one of New Jeriey'i largest ond
mo»t beautiful outdoor Nativity display*.Throughout the yeor» thi» ditploy ha*
been tel up by Newark Monument Cos.for the enjoyment of all during the
Christmas season. We feel It to be most
appropriate at this time to Invite the
reader* of The Advocate to visit u* thi*
year.
40Dt\» OF I
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Women Give Ten Golden Years-1 The greatest tributes to
the Sisters of North Jerseyhave been seen in these pagestime and time again as jubi-larians of 25, 50, even 60 yearsof service to God, speak joy-fully of their lives and con-
tinue, even' irr their age, totend for their fellowman.
•
2 —Mrs. Paul Cannizo is an
interim president—holding the
gavel in 1959-60 for the Pater-
son Diocesan Council of Cath-olic Women. We saw the groupcelebrate its 10th anniversaryin September, 1954, with Msgr.John J. Shanley, former mod-erator, still at the helm which
he continues to guide. Arch-
bishop Boland, then Bishop ofPaterson, founded the group.
•
3— Sister Hildegarde Marieis the symbol of the Sisters ofCharity of St. Elizabeth and ofall they have given North Jer-
sey and their missions through-
out not only 10 years, but themore than 100 years they haveserved the Church. As presi-dent of the College of St.Elizabeth, Sister Hildegardealso reminds us of the tremen-dous growth of the college,and her community.
Special note should also be
made here of the revised head-dress of this community andof several others in the area
•
4 —Kathleen Eager (left)and Eugenia-flones of St. Vin-
cent's School of Practical
Nursing. Montclair, typifyhundreds of nurses from 13
North Jersey hospitals and 11different nursing schools.
•
5 —A dream took shape forthe Sisters of St. Joseph ofNewark when they openedtheir unique and beautiful St.
Joseph's Village for Children,Rocklcigh, in 1958.
•
6 The speech labs, the lan-
guage labs, visual aids, the in-
ter-com, the science tapesall came into being in Catho-lic education during the past10 years. The New JerseyCatholic Bound Table of Sci-
ence in its third year won
state and national recognitionwith its elementary tapes.
Sister M. Justilia of Immac-
ulate Conception High School,Lodi, is typical of the forward-
looking principal who is tak-
ing advantage of the techno-
logical improvements.•
7 Mother Ninctta Innata,M.P.F., American co- founderand present Mother General ofthe Religious Teachers Filip-pini is our symbol of celebra-tions during the past 10 years.
The Kilippini Sisters celebrat-
ed their 50th anniversary in
the U. S. Oct. 30, 1960.
Other jubilees mentioned in
our pages include the spec-tacular Sisters of Charily cen-
tennial at Convent openingSeptember, 1958; the 50th an-
niversary of the Sisters of St.John Baptist, Gladstone, Apr.15, 1956; the 50th anniversaryof Missionary Sisters of theImmaculate Conception. Pater-
son; the Daughters of MaryHelp of Christians (Salesians)had a ‘'Golden Year” in 1958;and the Carmel, Morristown,commemorated the 251 h yearof its founding Dec. 30. 1959.
The Catholic Daughters ofAmerica also celebrated their50th year in New Jersey with
96 courts and 14,500 membersin 1956.
e
8 Mrs. Margaret Johnson
and Sister Theresa, F.M.A.,are working on an art projectat the Salesian iimthcrhuuse in
North llalcdon. Lay and re-
ligious have grown closer to-
gether in recent years to im-
prove all Catholic facilities.
The International Federationof Catholic Women in coopera-tion with the arehdiocc'te saw
to honor lay teachers in 1960,The Salesians were also in
the limelight more recentlyfor their housing of Cuban
Sisters.
•
9—Mrs Ernest P Tibbitts(left) and Mrs. Juhn Q Adams
are examples of the rote uf thelaywomen in the North Jersey
and international pictures.Mrs. Tibbitts was former pres-ident of the ArchdiocesanCouncil of Catholic Women in1955 and was elected first
president in 1956. She was
president of the InternationalFederation of Catholic Wom-
en, director of the Newark
province for the NCCW, re-
ceived the Pro Ecclcsia et
Pontifice medal from PopePius XII in 1954, was nation-al president of the St. Eliza-beth’s College Alumnae andwas honored by the college.
Mrs. Adams was on hand tochairman the national con-
vention of IFCA which met inNewark in 1958. She also typ-ifies the modem woman in herinitiative in organizing thefirst presentation ball for
Archbishop Boland in 1959.
•
10—Mother M. Dolorita,0.P.. present Mother General
of the Dominicans of Cald-
well, is our symbol of growth.Assuming her position in
1957 she has inaugurated a gi-gantic building program forCaldwell College and the Do-minican Sisters Infirmarybuilding and has supervisedbuilding in schools under her
jurisdiction. Most of the reli-gious communities throughoutNorth Jersey have acceptednew challenges in building.
•
11 Mrs. Thomas Smith andthe Ml. Carmel Guild are
synonymous.
Mrs. Smith first became
president of the Ml. CarmelGuild in 1936 and has held that
post by election since thattime. She also served as theNewark Province representa-tive to the National Council ofCatholic Women before theforming of the present counciland was a delegate to the In-ternational Union of CatholicWomen in Rome in 1947.
December 28, 1961 THE ADVOCATE 19
TITLE INSURANCETil no 1'4.1loI T XEW JERSEY
NewJerseyRealty
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NEWARK
TRENTON • HACKENSACK
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THE ADVOC VTE 1951.61
Ten Years of
Faithful Service
Is a Reward in Itself!
... lnstrtUcd
ytnhun l»«'r
I .-ulrim'*' 'rtt
-
. T *
epfiEr If? - <w ;i «»■'
: ?'-V;
u ~ of W*r«l1 Hi*hoi»
u,,rrt ’
The dissemina-
tion of truth is a
duty and a re-
sponsibility of a
newspaper. The
reliability and ac-
curacy in report-ing is an obliga-tion to readers.
You have main-
tained these
standards in your
first decade and
we wish you con-
tinued success in
the years to come
. . . congratula-tions on this your
Tenth Anniversary.
□
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11 COMMtRCfe STHIrfeT
A SALUTE TO
The/Adwcale
The Board of Trustees, officers and employees of Emigranttake this happy occasion to congratulate The Advocate on
the anniversary of its first ten years of dedicated service to
the Archdioceses of Newark and Paterson.
During this comparatively short time, The Advocate has
grown to become New Jersey’s third largest newspaper andthe State’s largest weekly. We wish The Advocate continued
success in the decades to come.
It has been our pleasure to serve these same communitiesfor more than one-hundred and eleven years ...11 decades
of service that have won theconfidence of succeeding genera-
tions of thrifty New Jersey depositors and helped Emigrantto stand among the world’s great savings institutions with
deposits of more than a billion dollars.
Anticipated for the quarter beginning January Ist, money
continuously on deposit for two years or more will earn a
regular dividend of 3?i% plus a special \i% —total 4% per
annum based on continuance offavorable earnings.
4%per annum
Anticipated for the quarter beginning January Ist, a regulardividend of 3U% per unnum on all balances of $5 or more
based on continuance of favorable earnings.
3^lper annum
EMIGRANTIndustrial
SAVINGS BANK
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Hetueen Pi/lh and Maditon Aienue*
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WEMBBB rBOEBAt. DEfOEIT IXBUBANCB COBPOBATIOM
Clorful Team, Individual Efforts Sprinkled Through Records From 1952-61Newark —a colorful
as-
aortment of athletic accom-plishments both team andindividual —it sprinkledthrough the 10-year records ofThe Advocate's sports depart-ment.
From 1952, this newspaper’sfirst full year when AndyStanfield topped all headlineswith his Olympic victoriesuntil 1961 when VinnieErnst
was named the most
valuable player In the Nation-al Invitation Tournamentthe acene has been crowdedwith stars.
EACH SPORT, at each levelhigh school, college, ama-
tour, professional has come
into the spotlight.That spotlight's brightest
rays perhaps should shine on:Stanfield with a double Olym-pic victory in 1952, Tom Hein-sohn and Lou Cordileone fortheir All-American and profes-sional achievements in basket-ball and football, respectively,and Seton Hall’s NIT champsin 1953, to name just a few.
A look into our files revealsthese highlights In a ycar-by-year rundown for the past dec-ade:
1952Stanfield equaled the Olvm-
Pic record for the 200-metorrun with a clocking of 20.7 andlater anchored the victorious-100-meter relay team for histwo gold medals. Stanfield'soutstanding individual effortwas matched, teamwise, bySt. Peter’s Prep, which
won state championshipsin three sports, football,basketball and track.
As for a group of teams,1952 has to go down in historyas one of the most fantastic
for North Jersey Catholic highschool basketball teams, which
were ranked as the best in the
egst.
THIS IN SHOWN from therecords and championshipscollected along the way by:
St. Peter’s (25-2) JerseyCity Jesuit Tournament, HCI-AA Southern Division. HCIAA
(in the first all-Catholic finalin the history of the league).State Group A, EasternSlates Catholic Tourney.
Seton Halt (26-2) St.Peter’s 1951 Christmas Tour-nament, Essex County Tour-
nament, Glens Falls Eastern
Tournament.St. Michael’s (UC) (25-6)
HCIAA Northern Division,Hudson County Jamboree,Metropolitan Knights of Co-lumbus.
St. Mary’s (E) (22-2) CityLeague. Union County Tourna-
ment. State Group R.Jack O'Connell of River
Edge and Fred Dwyer of
East Orange captured theIC4A 60-yard dash and mile
championships for Manhattan
and Georgetown, respectively,and St. Michael’s (JC) won
the national mile relay crown.
In schoolboy football, St.Peter’s took its seventh state
crown in eight years and, in
college action, John Thomasof Newark and Oregon Stateand Bob Ward of Elizabeth, a
Maryland All-American, play-ed with the college all-stars
against the Los Angeles Ramsand Jersey City’s Ed Brownset all-time yardage and re-
ception marks with Fordham
in a game against NYU.Also. St. Mary’s (E)
dropped football after eightyears and St. Benedict’s an-
nounced that post-graduatestudents would no longer be
eligible for athletics.
1953Just as Seton Hall Univer-
sity achieved national recog-nition with its NIT victory, St.Peter’s Prep remained high on
the statewide scene with four
NJSIAA championships In the
two biggest stories of this
year. .
It was truly Seton Hall’s
year kg Walter Dukes was
named All-American aftersetting season and career re-
bounding and scoring recordsfor the archdiocesan univer-
sity. He and Richie Regan, the
present Pirate coach, led thelocals to 31 wins in 33 games.
DUKES ALSO had otherhonors, being rated the MVP
in the NIT and winner of theHaggerty Award, given an-
nually to the outstandingplayer in the metropolitanarea. Something which gainedhim more headlines a littlelater was his conversion toCatholicism in quiet ceremon-
ies at Seton Hall with Reganns his sponsor.
Pirate Coach Honey Russell
wus chosen the coach of the
year in the metropolitan area.
Basketball also attained oth-
er headlines. Earle Markey ofWest New York became one of
Holy Cross College's all-time
scoring leaders and a mem-
ber of the All-Catholic teambefore joining the seminaryfollowing his graduation; St.
Peter's College made ita firstvisit to the NAIA tournamentin Kansas City, and St. Pet-
er’a Prep and St. Mary’s (E)ran up winning streaks of 28and 23 games, respectively.
FOOTBALL WAS paced bySt. Mary’* (R), which ran itsunbeaten record to 12 straightand captured the Group B lau-rels, and St. Peter’s, Group Achamps for the third straightseason.
In track, St. Benedict’s ranIts unbeaten string in cross-country to 52 meets beforebowing to Metuehen and theGray Bees took the prepschool mile at the Penn Re-lays. Fred Dwyer became thefirst miler ever to win theIC4A and national AAU hon-ors indoors the same year.
Stanfield set a national AAUrecord with 21.2 in the 220-yard dash. Johnny Kopil ofBayonne ran 4:22.7 for thenational scholastic mile titlein record time.
1954Delbarton, with a near-
sweep of North Jersey IvyLeague honors, and St. Aloy-sius, with three champion-ships, featured the sports re-sults in 1954 along with theaddition of Seton Hall (Pater-
son) and four new highschools playing athletics.
Basketball saw Tom Hein-sohn and Togo Palazzi, bothof Union City, pace HolyCross to the Sugar Bowl and
NIT championships and Jack
Quinn of Oratory notch a statescorlnfi record with 81 pointsin one came.
JERRY BECHTLE, St.Mary's (E), Vin Ryan, St.
Jamci, and Charley Dolan. St.Cecilia's (K), were named to
the All-Catholic All-America
team. .
Seton Hall had its first col-
lege All-America baseball
player when Bill Nolan, an in-
ficlder, was named to thedream team.
National honors came toBob Mischak of Army and St.Michael’s (Cranford) when he
was named to the college all-
star eleven which faced theDetroit Lions. Nutley’s FrankMcDonald gained All-America
ranking as a Miami end.
7955Administrative action stole
the show in 1955 with forma-tion of the Middle Eastern Col-
lege Athletic Association anda breakup of the state's Cath-olic schools into three groupsfor athletic competition.
In addition, the North Jer-
sey Catholic Conference was
reorganised and its league
Andy Stanfield Tommy Heinsohn
College Cage Scone
Pirate Five Faces TestSOUTH ORANGE - Just
one game ia listed oa the col-
lege cage scene during the
coming week. But. that’s a bigone as Seton Hall Universitywill test its undefeated (4-0)
record at Vlllanova Jan. 3.
The Pirates, who are build-
ing with several key sopho-mores this season, nosed out
each of their (our pre-Christ-mas foes. Nich Wrrkman andDan Coombs two of the
second-year men—have com-
bined for almost 45 points pergame. Werkman it the big gunwith a 27.3 average on 109
points. Coombs hat 4# pointsand a 17.3 average.
NT. PETER'S College is
resting from a Florida tripwhich saw the Peacocks score
a split againil Stetson (a 96-M lost) and Jacksonville (a95 at win).
The Peacocks' performance
convinced Coach Don Kennedythat the team has the offen-sive strength to hold its own,but the defense left somethingto be desired. That’s where St.Peter's will be trying to im-
prove for a return to actionJan. 4 against Upsala at the
Jersey City Armory.Pete Norton. St. Peter’s key
veteran, has been the point-scoring leader with 185. a 23.1
average. In eight games. Bob
Murray, the Peacocks’ 66
center, has contributed 15.3
per game.
20 THE ADVOCATE December 28, 1961
(Continued on Page 21)
ANOIIIIR
UIIAKTERLY
DIVIDEND
TOR
YOU...
AT THI CONTINUING
RATI OR
4%■■l ANNUM
PAID FOUR times
A YEAR
.rv.v.
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MONEY SAVED
BY THI 10th
EARNS FROM
THE lit
EQUITYSAVINGS
AND LOAN ASSOCIATION
Ml UAtNY AVtNUI (Catw Midland Am.) lIAIKY. MfW JtAJIY
HOUIS* Doily f.J, TWtd*i H 1 PM.
MURPHY BROS., MOTOR SALESExtend sincere good wishes to The Advocateon the observance of your Tenth Anniversary
i *l:* ST4I trn
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EMNNIi
mmmIV
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PitRECEIVING AWARD: Drew Smith (left) factory representative of Chrysler MotorsCorporations is shown making the "Quality Dealer Award ‘ to Heft to right). Jim,
HU. and Bill Murphy at their Elizabeth showroom.
Murphy Bros. Auto Dealers Since '32Willlem J . and Edward J, Murphy all were born in Newark amt parishioner* of Saint
tolumbus Church. They started in the used car business in 1932 They moved to Elisabeth to new andlarcer quarter* in ttu«i In IWi Murphy liruther* received their Chrysler. Plymouth ami Imperial deal'er»hip from Chrysler Motors Corporation. Jim Murphy stated "servire ha* always played an importantpart tn the success of our business. 1 have always maintained that after you sell a customer you musttender good service to him. In IBM a new' building was constructed oj over to.uuo so ft wnich isused primarily to service and ready new cart for delivery Murphy Bros have orie of the largest used
\tuJX2R
116 C! y ° Elizabeth, Integrity and honesty have always played an important part ofMurphy Bros, automotive operation They also maintain tnat, "After IVe Sell, We Serve" will alwayscontinue as long as Murphy Uros. is in business.
Therefore we at Murphy Motors are pleased to congratulate you on your Tenth Anniversary . . .
as we join in ihe celebration of our Twenty Ninth year tn the automobile business.
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NO LOSS NO WORRY NO_CAREM mm contplata Monution abont yow Lila Incmwr Ml*»*on Contract
Name Age
Address
City Zone State~~
REV. FATHER RALPH, s.v.d. catholic universities
316 N. MICHIGAN CHICAGO 1
schedule expanded, Don BoacoHigh withdrew from the Bcr-gen-Passaic Catholic Confer-ence and St. Michael'a (JC)left the HCIAA.
AGAIN DOMINATING the■cholaatic basketball scene,St. Peter’s Prep (Catholic Achamps) and St. Mary’s (E)(B champs) went on to great-er heights, taking the Metro-politan Jesuit Tournament andEastern States Catholic Invi-tation Tournament crowns, re-
spectively. Both won theirstate titles for the fifthstraight time.
In track, Vic DiMaio of St.Aloyalua established a staterecord with 1:57 in the half-mile and Tom Skutka of Rock-away, and later Notre Dameand Kansas, lowered the na-tional schoolboy mile standardto 4:19.
7956Picking up where Stanfield
left off in 1952, Tom Courtneyof Livingston grabbed twogold medals In the Olympicsand set an American citizens’800-meter mark. Stanfield
equaled his 200-meter recordaet in 1952, but had to settlefor second place.
Dick Gaines was voted MVP
in the Richmond InvitationBasketball Tournament, help-ing Seton Hall to the consola-
tion title. St. Peter’s Collegebegan a streak which wouldstretch to 19, the longest inthe school’s basketball history.Tom Helnsohn was voted All-American after breaking allschool scoring records.
Chet Sanok of St. Valentine’s
(Bloomfield) became the firstamateur ever to win thestate open golf torunamenttwice.
1957St. Cecilia’s (K) became the
first school since St. Peter’s
(1952-53) to win championshipsin each sport which it spon-sored as the Saints took the
soccer, basketball and base-ball crowns. St. Peter’s, Del-barton and St. Aloysius eachwon three championships.
"’
Heinsohn again led the bas-ketball headlines, being namedrookie of the year with theBoston Celtics, St, Peter’s
College capped its two-season19-game winning streak with
a berth In the NIT and postedits best record until then,18-4.
LOCAL INTEREST in Ma-jor league baseball was heigh-tened as Jack Tighe, for-
merly of St. Cecilia’s (K),debuted as manager of theDetroit Tigers.
Courtney returned to thetrack headlines as he loweredthe world’s 880-yard record to1:46.8. Seton Hall scored itsfirst major victory in recentyears, taking the 880-yard re-
lay at the Eastern Intercol-
legiate Championships.
Joe Mcßride of Areola post-ed the comeback story of the
year, winning the New JerseyAmateur Golf Championshipjust two years after an op-eration had apparently ended
his career.
7958Tom Courtney- announced his
retirement, Bill Cochrane, St.Peter’s Prop coach, won 31consecutive games in baseballand football and St. Cecilia’s
produced, in Bill Raftcry, one
of the finest all-around athletesIn New Jersey high school his-
tory.Racking up the first unde-
feated and untied season inits history, St. Peter’s Preptook Group A honors in foot-ball while Delbarton ran itsunbeaten skein to 27 games
and won another Ivy Leaguecrown.
IN BASKETBALL, Itclnsohn
was the pro standout, HankMorano and Pepper Dooley the
Collegiate stars at St. Peter’sand Raftery the schoolboy ace.
Morano and Dooley helpedCoach Don Kennedy’s Pea-cocks to a 20-4 mark andanother NIT spot.
Flashing an amazing 22-0
record, St. Peter's Prep stood
head-and-shoulders over thefield In baseball. The Petreansalso won the Greater NewarkTournament.
Five Bergen County schoolsand one Hudson county entryformed the Tri-County Cath-olic Conference for Class Aschools.
1959Cornelia (Pooch) Harrington
of Wayne became the young-est qualifier for the UnitedStates Winter Olympic teamat 15 and Cordileone grabbeda first-team All-Americanberth for his line play at
Clemson in two of the topstories.
The name Helnsohn againhogged the professional head-lines as the St. Michael’s gradhelped spark the Boston Cel-
tics to the National Basket-ball Association championshiponce more.
BASKETBALL HEADLINES
were taken in college by BillSmith of St. Peter’s, whomoved toward all of the Pea-cocks' major scoring records.
Sharing the spotlight in that
sport were George Blancy of
Holy Crojs, John Tully atNotre Dame and Rich Kamin-ski of Vlllanova, all North Jer-sey boys.
Football had some standout
performers besides Cordileonewith Bob Scarpitto of Rahwaymaking a namo for himself
at Notre Dame and LarryHubbard of Montclair at Mar-quette. In pro football, JoeBiscaha of Pope Plus playedwith the New York Giants'Eastern Division champions.
IN SCHOOLBOY sports, Dc-Paul and Our Lady of theLake Joined the varsity ranksand Morris Catholic and Es-sex Catholic made plans for
entering that group the fol-
lowing year. On the oppositeside of the coin, Holy Trinity(Hackensack) and Good Coun-sel left the interscholastic
athletics field and St.Michael's (Newark) was get-ting ready to follow suit.
The big names in the scho-lastic ranks were Rafferty,Ernst and Bergen Catholic'sJack Mostyn. While Raft.cryand Ernst were making thefollowers of St. Cecilia’s andSt. Aloysius happy, Mostynwas getting ready for his cel-ebrated ”9.3’’ 100-yard dash,which was never accepted as
a record.
7960Cropping up again was the
name Heinsohn, but it was
a former area resident, VinceLombardi, coach of tho Green
Bay Packers' Western Divi-sion champions in the NationalFootball League, who came
in for a large share of gloryfor 1960.
Lombardi, who coached St.Cecilia's (E) in one of its
greatest football eras in the
mid-19405, succeeded in bring-ing the Packers back froma position as one of the weak-est teams in the division tothe No. 1 spot. >
ANOTHER LOCAL pro-grid man, Bob Mischak, re-turned to action to gam theall-star team with the NewYork Titans of the American
FootbatULeague: -
Unlike 1952 and 1956, whenlocal residents Stanfied and
Courtney brought homegold medals, North Jersey waswithout a winner. It wasn’t
unrepresented though, and an
Asbury Park man, Frank Buddof ViUanova, almost grabbeda gold medal with his school's400-mctcr relay team.
DICK MCDONOUGH startedto flash the form which couldlead the South Orange swim-
mer into the 1964 Olympicswhile Leon Pras of Dover, a
hurdler, and Johnny Kopil, a
marathon man. started tomake bids for future stardom.
With Jim Manhardt settingthe pace, St. Mary's (E) com-
piled a gaudy 22-2 record to
annex the Catholic B diademin basketball and Our Lady ofthe Valley and St. Mary’s (R)played undefeated football sea-
sons to highlight the schoolboyscene.
St. Bonvcnlure's Bill Croatearned the distinction of beingnamed to tho Paterson Dioc-esan baseball all-stars for thefourth straight season. Anotherfeature was the first season
of play in the new Big Five(now Big Seven) Football Con-
ference.
7967As mentioned above, Ernst
drew the noil as MVP in theNIT for the No. 1 story during
1961. The inspiring play ofthis shorter-than-average soph-omore sparked Providence tothe tournament title and
gained national prominenceand ranking for the school.
Blaney and Smith cappedtheir fine collegiate careerswith tho announcement thatboth had signed with the NewYork Knickerbockers.
THE KNOCKS also figuredIn another story of big localimportance. Ed Donovan, whohad played his high schoolbasketball at St. Patrick's(Elizabeth), was signed as theKnicks’ head coach. He leftSt. Bonaventure University totake the Job. Donovan latermoved back to Elizabeth.
Speaking of St. Patrick’s,that school came back aftera long lapse to win the Cath-olic C Championship.
FOR DEVELOPMENTS atone school, Seton Hall boththe high school and university
probably led the way. ThePony Pirates won their firstCatholic A basketball champ-ionship and added the statefootball laurel after narrowlymissing —a 21-20 upset bySt. Benedict’s the first un-beaten football season for theschool.
On the less pleasant aide,tho university and the area
were shocked with the an-
nouncement that two SetonHall players were involved inthe newest' basketball fixingscandals. In the wake of this,a de-emphasis program was
voted into effect by the school.
Walter Dukes
Bill Smith
Peacocks Aim
For Number 10JERSEY CITY - St. Peter’s
College, which Is enjoying a
mighty successful rifle season,will shoot for another victoryJan. 5 when it entertains Coop-er Union.
The Peacock nimords cap-tured their first nine matchesbefore the holidays and willbe looking for number to
against Cooper Union. N.Y.U.
and C. W. Post College werethe most recent victims, fall-
ing in a triangular meet Dec.15 in Jersey City.
T-CCC Outlook
Crusaders, Dons Are Favored 5sORADELL - When the holi-
day tournament activity hasbeen cleared from the boards,the Tri-County Catholic Con-ference will get down to thebusiness of pursuing theleague championship.
Queen of Peace currentlyleads the circuit after beatingPope Pius in the only T-CCC
game to date. However,when the teams move into the
homestretch, Bergen Catholic,the defending champion, andDon Boaco should be hasslingfor the crown.
A GOOD LINE~on the rela-tive strength of those twoteams could come in the Ber-
gen County Holiday Festivalif they should meet. Neverthe-less, they’ll face each othertwice in league games andthose contests could go a longway toward deciding the titlist.
If cither or both of thosetwo don't live up to expecta-tions. St. Joseph's could moveinto the picture. The Blue Jayshave been doing well and fig-ure to threaten. With young-er and less experienced teams,Queen of Peace, Pope Piusand St. Cecilia's aren't ratedas strong contenders.
Bergen Catholic has perhapsthe T-CCC's top individual starIn John Hammel, who has
racked up 105 points in hisfirst five games. The Crusad-ers copped four of those
games.
IN ADDITION to Hammel,who is 8-3, Coach John Maz-ziotta has Ted Bur (6-3) inhis starting lineup to provide
rebounding strength. Mike Sul-livan (5-10) is the only otherlettorman besides Hammel andhe gives the team an extrascoring threat. The other start-ers, Tom Mullins (6-0) andJim O’Brien (5-10), round out
a strong squad.The Brown boys, Jim (5-10)
and Dick (6-0), sparked DonBosco to four wins in as manygames before Christmas andinstalled the Dons as a seriousthreat to Bergen Catholic.
Included in Don Bosco's vic-tories is a big win against a
strong Eastslde team.
Mickey Vaughn (6-1), TerryMurray (511) and Bruce Wa-terman (6-1) have also beengoing well for Coach Dick
O'Brien, In his first soason ashead man.
AFTER A SLOW start. St.Joseph's has streaked to threewins and could be ready tojoin the title chase. TomBrooks and Dennis McLaugh-lin have been setting the scor-
Ing pace with 84 and 83 points,respectively, in five games for
Coach Joe McGrath, also In
his initial season.
Bill Wynne (8-6), a veteran,and Gerry Stoeckel (6-3), a
newcomer, have helped Queenof Peace to a 3-2 mark thusfar with help from John Pal-
frey (6-0) and Bill Lewandow-ski (5-11), a couple of latter-men. Wynne tossed in 94 pointsfor Coach Pep Saul's Queens-tnen in their first five gamesthis season.
Dick Knothe appears to bo
Pope Pius’ big hope in the
early going since the major-ity of the team is inexperi-enced. A consistent scorer,Knothe could keep the Eaglesflying until the newcomers
gain some poise and help JoeOllvola to a success in his first
season as head coach.Rounding out a large new
coaching list is Dick “Red”Pasche at St. Cecilia’s. BillRyan has led the Saints' scor-ing in the first four gameswith Leo Stevenson and EdSchurmann not too far behind
THE SACRED Heart Pro-
gram, produced by the Jesultjof St. Louis University, is the
onlydaily Catholic radio broad-cast on the air.
Colorful Team...
(Continued from Page 20)
December 28, 1981 THE ADVOCATE 21
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Years of Service
Among your valued advertiser*
today, we are sure, there are many
who have advertised consistentlysince the first issue of The Advocate
was published, 10 years ago, on Dec.
30, 1951.
The Essex Art Engraving Com-
pany has enjoyed the opportunity of
serving The Advocate as its photoen-
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realized a measure of pride In Its
growth. Our efforts have always been
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The loyalty of The Advocate has
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To The Advocate staff, we ex-
press "Congratulations," on this mile-
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DENVILLE BOAT AND SPORT CENTERExtends good wishes to The Advocate
on the observance of your Tenth AnniversaryBob Henry, owner of New Jersey's Largest exclusive sport shop, is a firm believer insports as a means to keep youth active and prevent the increase of juvenile delin-quency. Over the years Denville Boat and Sport Center has provided sports equip-ment at reasonable prices for residents of North Jersey. "The Center" is located ona main arteiy carrying traffic to the many lakes and hunting grounds in North Jer-sey. Mr. Henry has been foresighted enough to keep on hand all sport items thatmight be called for by sportsmen on their way for outdoor recreation.A policy of maintaining superior quality at fair prices together with service, will con-tinue to be of utmost importance in the future. We look forward to many yearsof close association with The Advocate and its readers and congratulate you on
your Tenth Anniversary.
DENVILLE BOAT AND SPORT CENTER"NEW JERSEY'S LARGEST SELECTION"
DENVILLE, N. J.ROUTE 46OA 7-3030
Eventful, Active Period for Youth Chronicled in Advocate's First DenudeNEWARK An eventful,
active period for North Jer-ry’s Catholic youth has beenchronicled in the first 10 yearsof The Advocate.
During that time, numerousfirsts have been achieved, na-
tional offices have been wonby local persons and expan-sion and change have come to
many youth groups, notablythe Catholic Youth Organiza-tion.
IT WAS IN this time thatthe Newark Archdiocesan CYOhad anew director appointedas did the Paterson DiocesanCYO.
CYO activities covered a
wide field, supplying reli-gious, social, cultural andathletic programs. Some of theannual contests which at-tracted the youngsters delud-ed the one-act play, march oftalent, essay, hobby show,spelling, journalism and ora-torical.
IN NEWARK, the annualyouth rally was put on an
archdiocesan level and drewhuge crowds each year atRoosevelt Stadium, JerseyCity. In Paterson, the youth
rally program was started
during the decade.
A year-by-year review,which attempts to point outsome of the highlights for thepast 10 years, follows. It can’thelp but omit many of thestories which made headlines,but we'll try to include asmuch as space will allow.
7952National office came to
members of the Newark Arch-diocesan CYO as Rev. JohnJ. Kilcy (now Msgr. Kiley),
then Essex County CYO • di-
rectors, was named head ofthe new Eastern Inter-Region-al Conference of CYO di-
rectors, and William Stuart ofNewark was elected firstchairman of the National Fed-eration of Diocesan Catholic
Youth Councils.One of the highest local
tributes was the awarding ofthe Pro Juvcntutc Medal (for
service to youth) to James J.McMahon of Montclair.
The reign of North Jerseydrum and bugle corps was ex-tended as St. Vincent’s Cadets
(Bayonne) took the Veteransof Foreign Wars national
straight year and the Ameri-can Legion’s national crown
for the second time in as
many years.
7953This was a key year for the
Newark Archdiocesan CYO.Msgr. Kilcy was appointedarchdioccsan youth director,replacing Bishop McNulty,who was named to the Pater-
son Sec. John Downey .took theposition of executive-secretaryof the archdioccsan CYO.
The year was also marked
by a number of importanttalks by Archbishop Bolandon the importance of youth.
YOUTH RALLIES at thefour counties drew a recordatendance of more than 40,-000 persons.
On the drum and buglescene, St. Vincent’s extendedits domination of the nationalVFW crown, but was unseatedin the American Legion finalsby Holy Name of Garfield.
Mary E. Walsh won the fifthannual Pro Juvcntute Medal.
7954Asa climax to Marian Year
observance, the first annualarchdioccsan Marian Rallywas held before more than30,000 persons at RooseveltStadium, Jersey City.
This followeda scries of
monthly projects based on va-ious apparitions of theBlessed Mother.
AS A COMPLEMENT to theCYO’s 14-ycar radio series on
WAAT, the first ih a scries oftelevision shows,’ directed byChris Uentschel, was begun.
The Pro Juvcntute Medalwas awarded to Mrs. JosephHannan.
Another first was recordedwith an archdioccsan essaycontest.
In Paterson, Bishop McNultyappointed Rev. Francis Mur-phy diocesan CYO director.
7955Firsts dominated the news
in 1955 with a program ofmonthly Holy ’Hours in-augurated hy the Newark CYOalong with a hobby show anda journalism contest.
For the first time, a HolyHour and awards programfor Boy Scouts were comblftcdand the first St. George's Med-al was given for outstandingcontribution to scouting at thefirst Catholic Scoutcrs ban-quet. John Merity of JerseyCity was the initial winner.
A NEW MEDAL for contrib-ution to youth the Pro Deoct Juvcntute Medal wasgranted for the first time withMrs. John Quinn of Hasbrouck
Heights gaining the honor.Paterson had a first with its
district meeting of CYO adultadvisors.
National attention for an in-dividual came to Dennis Lynchof Cranford, who won a na-tional life saving award forsaving eight-year-old Alvin
Wynn Jr. from drowning inthe Rahway River.
>St. Vincent's again annexedthe VFW title and BlessedSacrament (Newark) won theAmerican Legion laurels.
7956Expansion of the youth pro-
gram in Paterson was re-flected by the first diocesanYouth Rally, attended by 6,000
persons, at Hinchliffe Stadium.Paterson, and the formation ofthe Paterson-llawthorne CYOCouncil.
A modesty crusade waslaunched in Newark and prizeswere awarded at the first hob-
by show.
INDIVIDUALS in the spot-light included: Katherine Han-
ley of Orange, the American
representative to the WorldFederation of Catholic YoungWomen and Girls at Rome;
Elsie Moreira- of Newark,chairman ' of the NationalCouncil of Catholic Youth’sspiritual committee; JohnPctrik of Cranford, winner ofthe St. George's Medal, VictorPodesta of Plainfield, winnerof the Pro Deo ct Juvcntutc
Medal, and Frank Mcrtz of
Summit, runner-up in nationalCYO oratory contest.
St. Vincent's repeated itsfirst place finish in the VFW
competition and Blessed Sac-
rament retained its American
Legion honors.
7957The Newark CYO opened a
weekly scries of TV shows,
presenting various Biblical
scenes, and delegates met toorganize the first Archdioccsan
High School Sodality Union.Eileen Prcndegast was laternamed the first executive-sec-retary of the ArchdioccsanFederation of Sodalities.
Paterson conducted its firstannual Day of Recollection for
high school students at St.John’s Cathedral, Paterson.
ST. ALOYSIUS High Schoolretired the Sister Mary Alex-dra Trophy, top prize in theSeton Forensic League tourna-ment, after winning the titlefor the third time.
Walter Measday of West-wood was selected to receivethe St. George's Medal and Pe-ter Feury of Jersey City was
presented the Pro Deo ctJuvcntutc Medal. Another in-dividual in the spotlight was
John C. Milano of Irvington,chairman of the 14th National
Congress of the National Fed-eration of Catholic College Stu-
dents, which opened with a
Solemn Pontifical Mass at St.Patrick’s Pro-Cathedral inNewark. Sessions were heldin New York.
Holy Name surprised St.Vincent’s and Blessed Sacra-
ment by taking the American
Legion championship.
7958This was another year of in-
dividual recognition. John Mc-Laughlin of St. Cecilia's
(Kearny) achieved top honors
as he was elected president ofthe National Council of Catho-lic Youth.
Another national office wentto William Beatty Jr. of Mor-ris Plains, who was chosenvice president of InternationalAffairs for the NFCCS.
VINNIE FARRELL of New-
ark, the sports official, woo
the Pro Deo et Juvcntute Med-al and Howard W. Reilly won
the St. George's Medal.
In the American Associationof Teachers of French contest.
Archbishop Walsh High Schoolstudents captured two first
prizes. Audrey Julg in third
year French and Mary LouDcßcneditis in second yearFrench and Mary Lou Deßcne-ditis in second year French.
The first Young CatholicLeaders workshop was held
and the first retreat for
public junior and senior
high school students in Eliza-beth was conducted. The Par-
ish Union of Sodalities wasformed in the archdiocese.
Blessed Sacrament becamethe second corps in history towin both the American Legionand VFW national titles.
7959Paterson again claimed a
big first as it conducted a dio-cesan CYO convention at St.Philip the Apostle (Clifton).
Newark’s big firsts were the
opening of Camp Christ theKing for boys in Blairstownby the CYO and the launchingof CYO football for grammerschool boys in Hudson County.
CAROL PRYOR of SacredHeart High School won firstprize in a national essay con-
test on the American Phy-sicians and Surgeons FreedomProgram.
Dr. Walter F. Robinson, as-
sistant superintendent ofschools in Bayonne, won theSt. George's Medal and Wil-liam F. Price was named thePro Deo ct Juvcntute Medalwinner.
Blessed Sacrament had a
20-mcct victory streak broken
by St. Vincent’s, but still man-
aged to repeat as both VFWand American Legion champs.
7960People again took the head-
lines with one of them settinga big precedent for the New-ark Archdiocese. Arthur D’lta-lia of Mt. Virgin (Garfield)became the first representa-tive of the archdiocese to winthe National Catholic YouthConference Senior OratoricalContest.
John Downey was named tothe board of directors of theNational Conference of Catho-lics in Youth Serving Agenciesand Betty Ghegan of Arch-bishop Walsh High School was
a delegate to the White HouseConference on Children andYouth.
OTHER LEADING individu-als included Anthony Scialla ofWaldwick, named religious af-fairs vice president for theNFCCS; Walter F. Joyce ofNewark, winner of the St.
George's Medal, and Dr. Mat-thew C. McCue, winner of thePro Deo et Juvcntutc Medal.
In the Paterson Diocese, the
first Holy Hour for Morris
County Cub Scouts was heldand the first annual languagefestival was staged by highschools in the diocese.
Hudson County held its firstCYO Teen Conference and a
Faith for Youth lecture series
began under archdiocesanCYO auspices.
7967• The most significant develop-ment was the Newark CYO'sobservance of 20 years of serv-
ice to the archdiocese. Con-
tinuing its growth was the ac-
quisition of Camp Tcgakwithafor girls in Lake Hopatcong,
Growth in activities also con-
tinued in Paterson, highlightedby the starting of a closedretreat program for Catholic
high school students. PopePius seniors were the first totake part.
LOUIS C. MANCUSO of Nut-ley won a grand prize in theKodak High School PhotoAwards contest in the peopleof any age category. Jean
Reynolds of St. Anastasius(Tcancck) was named vicepresident of the National Cath-olic Young Adult Council.
Holy Trinity High School'sJanet Roguski was elected
governor of New Jersey GirlsState.
The St. George’s Medal wentto Leo Von Schaumberg andthe Pro Deo et Juvcntute Med-al to Agnes Sullivan of Or-
ange.
New on the local scene was
a school of journalism for
high school students sponsoredby the New Jersey CatholicInstitute of the Press.
THE SOVEREIGN Order ofthe Knights of Malta traces itsexistence to a group of men
who maintained a hospital inthe Holy Land in the 11th cen-
tury.
MAY RALLY: Archbishop Boland crowns a statue of
the Blessed Virgin at an archdiocesan Marian Rallyin Roosevelt Stadium, Jersey City. The rallies were
among the highlights of the past decade.
Vocation Notes
There Is
Danger in DelayBy Msgr. William F. Furlong
“Take your time” is a statement we have often heard. And,of course, its connotation is: "Don’t be in a hurry. Take it slow-ly." Perhaps it would be better if we ignored the connotationand looked at the statement’s objective meaning.
Take “your” time the time that God, from all unbeginningeternity, has planned for you to have. Take it and use itevery second of it the way God planned for you to use it,because what you do with it will determine what your unendingeternity will be like.
What could be more frustrating more frightening thanfor you to realize that you had used all your God-given time ina way different from the way God had planned for you to useit? How frightening it would be in your last moments to realizethat your whole life was a disappointment to God.
• • •
SO OFTEN, TO SO MANY of our boys and girls who saythat they want to start doing something now, about becomingpriests and Sisters, the advice is given: “Take your timetake it slowly.”
It isn’t good advice. Many vocations have been ruined throughdelay. Boys and girls should be encouraged to "take” their time
the time God has given to them —and to use it God’s way.• • •
SEVERAL WEEKS AGO, WE WROTE about the Dominicanlay Brother, Blessed John Massias. Because of a variety of cir-cumstances, he did not enter religious life until he was almost40.
He knew from experience how dangerous It was to delayIn following one’s vocation. Once when it was suggested to himthat a boy who wanted to study for the priesthood "wait a while,”Brother John's answer was: “Oh no! Never put an obstacle inthe way of a religious vocation. So often It spoils everything foryoung souls who want to give themselves to God."
• • • .
CHRISTOPHER MORLEY TELLS this story of the greatmagician, Houdini: “1 once saw him put time to its maximumadvantage. He jumped out of an airplane, heavily handcuffed,and had to get out of the shackles before he could pull the stringof his parachute. He figured he had only 28 seconds in whichto get loose. I bet he didn’t waste any of that time in starry-eyed gazing at the scenery."
Morley’s conclusion was: "If I wore a moralist. I’d adviseeveryone to use his time as completely as Houdini must haveused it after stepping out of that airplane."
That story makes us realize how important even one secondcan be. It makes us realize how infinitelymore important a yearcan be. And it makes us realize how displeased Our Lord couldbe with the young man called to the priesthood or Brotherhood,or the young woman called to the Sisterhood who might say:"Oh, I’m young. I'll wait. What difference will another year ortwo make?”
It will make a big difference If he or she Is not where Godwants them to be. As they begin this new year, well might theyask themselves: "Where docs God want me to be this year?”
• • •
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 High
School, Wayne, N. J. Telephone: OXbow 4-5759.
St. Cecilia's
Rates Runner-upENGLEWOOD—St. Cecilia’s
High School has been named
runner-up for the annual Cru-sader Trophy, awarded by the
Holy Cross College Club ofNew York. Chaminadc of
Mineola, L. 1., was declaredwinner of the award.
The champion is selectedfrom 215 high schools in Bergenand Hudson counties la NewJersey and nine New Yorkcounties.
Petersville
Wins Contest
JERSEY CITY - St. Peter’sGrammar School (Jersey
City) won the top prize in theHudson County CYO journal-ism contest for its newspaper,“Petersville, 1968."
Runner-up was St. Andrew’s
(Bayonne) with AU Saints Jer-
sey City) taking third place.Honorable mention was givento St. Atoysius (Jersey City),
Christmas BallGLEN ROCK A Christ-
mas Rail will be sponsoredby the Young Adults of St.Catharine’s at 8:30 p m. Dec.29 at the school gym. Musicwill be the John Schaeferband. Married couples are in-vited.
Undefeated 5s
Cut in EssexMONTCLAIR -The num-
ber of undefeated teams in theEssex County CYO boys bas-ketball leagues has been trim-med considerably in earlyplay, but the leader in eachof the nine circuits still sports
an unblemished standard.
St. John’s (Orange) in Junior
B, AU Souls (East Orange) In
Grammar A, Our Lady of Sor-
rows (South Orange) in Gram-
mar li and St. Michael’s
(Newark) In Grammar C lead
the way with (our wins and
no losses each.
Holding the top spots in the
Intermediate loops are: Sa-cred Heart (Bloomfield) in A,St. John’s (Orange) in B andOur Lady of Sorrows in C.
Ties dominate the other two
Junior leagues with a three-
way Jam involving Blessed
Sacrament (East Orange).
Holy Cross (Harrison) and SI.
Benedict’s (Newark) in A
and a two-way deadlock be-
tween Sacred Heart (Bloom-
field) and St. Thomas (Bloom-
field) in C.
22 the advocate December 28, 1961
SAVINGS RECEIVED
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Your
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DIVIDING
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242 STATE ST.cu.n.. SALEM HACKENSACK. N. J. £
HACKENSACK s OLOCST FINANCIAL INSTITUTION• fie* foiling Nail !o Om Oil.it
9 Optn MgnduiT fitnuig* 6 10 a
i*
LOYOLA
SCHOOL(Jotuit Fother»)
ANNOUNCES
ENTRANCE
EXAMINATIONS
(Four Partial S(holarthipt)
JAN. 20, 1962
>•< hluatllM
AffLutnt* •((!<.
Rev. Headmett£er980 Park Avenue
New York 28. N.Y.
BU 04200
ACADIMY OF
SAINT ELIZABETH
lICONDAMV SCHOOL FOB emur«ua4*4 ISM Falla Ar.tHll.d
SMtra H Ckirllr
C»tm. Ntw J*r**r
JEfforton 9-1600
A CALL TO MERCYHave you heard If. Christ la calling
you to the apostolate of mercy, at
a BROTHER OF MERCY, to nursethe alck In hoapitala. Infirmaries and
private homes, or. practice a trade
or other domestic work necessaryfor the well-being of a Community.The Brothers are engaged In worksof mercy In the U It.A . Germany.Holland and the mission fields ofAfrica “Blessed are the mercifulfor thee shall obtain merer
“
Rave
vour soul the mercy way. for Infor*mation. write:
RIV. BROTHER PROVINCIALBROTHERS OF MfRCV
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Founded In 1899 by the Sisters of Charity
College of Saint ElizabethConvent Station, New Jersey
CALDWEU, NEW JERSEY
CALDWELL COLLEGE FOR WOMENCONDUCTED BY THE SISTERS OF ST. DOMINIC
Fully Accredited Offering A.B. and B.S. Degrees
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Conducted by the Sisters of MercyApply: Director of Admissions, Lakewood, N.J.
wooeeo—foeoeoooo—o—oseeeoeoeee——o—eeeeeoeeoooeoot
PROVE YOUR LOVE FOR CHRIST
Sisters of the Sorrowful Mother(A fimtMM CmntwMyl
Ar<i«m*i HnrK.lt mirwne. •*>»»«.»*»,UHnflintr. J(„ nlti.a IlKfirr. and ctnmr.He***» Vhtmli' lltmrnl.n andtrt-Mitt whrtt.lt prnfr.«.ntin «r 4 rufitnlwA~.lt n« nurtitt< Hmw. la, lha mm lhatrt.iilrt.nii «n.| hrtnrlrM rillMim. fortlftlniMitxu Art U lr> So
Writ# it VHilirm Oiittiitii.»• Mtttii A.tKiM. OmnM Nn Jiihi
iTiltMtiti OA rtSMi
BE A
FRANCISCAN PRIESTDo CHRIST'S work In Perithei. Schools,
Home Mil'ITiiioni or Foreign Minions.
VOCATION DIRECTOR
FRANCISCAN FATHERS
, .....S*- Tkomei Met* Ctt-cai*
St. R*it>««t.>* • Manttltry of7»K l Jt.lic* Sts. N. L
•«« Itt. Hollideyibwg. f*. Washington |7, J>. C
JESUIT HHOTIIIIKS**"• flu111 br pt«l« ontl tlrtl-ctti-ar. at ihtit tlatitol ihluul aa.ll»IA«I util.i.ri bam till* ontl ca tox.g* nuiitani t«i lira baallal aula
DIRECTOR OF BROTHER VOCATIONS*Ol leu fodhoa t*«<t H,» Vath is Mf.
eb*«« tutba 4 0)00
iMlHllllllllliillilllilllllilllllllllllllllllilllllllilll
THE
TRINITARIAN FATHERSoffer on opportunity to young menond boys of GrammarSchool ond High School to become a priest or a Brother
in the Trinitarian Order. Lock of funds no impedimentWrite to;
VOCATION DIRECTOR, O.S.S.T.Bo* 5742, Baltimore 8. Maryland
llUllluiitiiiiiiuiuiiiiiiiuiiiiiMiiiiiiiiUiiiiiitimiiit'iutiiiiiliiillliiliium
For Persons Over 21
9:00 P.M. to 12:30 A.M.
DANCING
EVERY FRIDAY NIGHT
CLUB ST. LEOMarket St., at the Boulevard, East Paterson, NJ.
Featuring Alternating
ORCHESTRASDirections:
Driving South on Garden State Parkway, Exit 158
Driving North on Garden State Parkwoy, Exit 157
(One Minute from either Exit)
IT’S UP TO YOU IN ’62•WUNe/.el i.i
far oar ihouthu? ..,CAku
(«•
«p.
jwd ■ nio.urnt
•»t UMiiMi uid not lone ate
mentioned it in this column):For the first time in the history of
mankind, atheism is on tha march;and the Church is helpless to prevent
-3U>e * d,<nce ot anti-Christ
.. .” Why
W% < /hHin
t» the Church helpless? To quotaCARDINAL CUSHING, the Church
is helpless "became xct don't hoveIn tup opinion, a missionary Church.*’
.. . These are serious words, a friiht-enlnc Indictment . . . That's why at
the close oi 19SI, wa say to ail Cath-olics: IT'S CP TO YOU IN 'l2 . . .You. the readers of this column, are
under fiod our mission strength. Native priests offered
Mesa this mornlni in pagan INDIA and EGPVT because yoesacrificed to help pay the costa of their education. Native Sis-
ters leach chlldrrn the catechism In JORDAN; five medical
care to poverty-stricken cripples in ETHIOPIA; nurse lepersand Incurables In INDIA, because you make It possible. InERITREA, IRAN, IRAQ, and NYRIA, chapels and schools are
nnder construction because you provided the funds . . . You.who rrad this column, are Irreplaceable. Without you. we mustretreat
...In 191?. will you measure your sacrifice by thesacrifices our priests and Hlsters make on the mission fronts?Mill you measure your sacrifice by the Hacridce Our Lordmade? .
. . Pray for our priests and Sisters. We must preventthe advance of snll.C*—
7k Htfy Fjshr) Atone AjJ
f" th OrxnuJ Osrti
ll- t. ...i hi im;ltallowo YOU TO EDUCATE A PRIEST? Here are six young men,already In the seminary who need help In order lo be ordained.GREGORIO DA ASMARA and MICHELE DA TERAMNI art
studying in Iho SEHAPIIIC SEMINARY In ERITREA. rOUADBAHHOUR and NAKLE AKIKI are students at BT. FRANCISXAVIER SEMINARY In REIRUT. LEBANON. FARES MACA-ROON and GEORGES MASSOUH are classmates at ST. PAUL’SSEMINARY in JERUSALEM. If you "adopt” on# of these stu-dent*. he will wrile lo you. keep you up-10-daie onhu progress,lie will one day. please God. forgive sins, bapllte pagans, offerthe Holy Sarriflre
... To "adopr* a luture priest la not expen,sue. The training, which lasts *u years, coats only 1100 a year,it hat a lei than 12 a week—less than a steady amnker pays forcigarettes i Write to u*
Cl YOU To TRAIN A NATIY'E SISTER? Slaters, ulcourse, are
Invaluable In mission work. The MEDICAL SISTERS OP STJOSEPH run hospitals, dispensaries, and clinics In southernINDIA To train one of them tlhe training lasts two years) costs|ioo altogether, or SISO a year Y'ou may make the paymentslo suit your own coovemenee-W a week. *l230 a month »isfla year. ele. Here are six Sisters who need help: SISTER AVILA.SISTER DEI.PIIINE. SISTER JESSIE. SISTER COLI.ETE,SISTER ROSINA. SISTER PELAGIA. Writ. to us.
f! YOU TO "ADOPT” AN ORPHAN? FATHER LEONE POO-Gl. our "orphan pries!" In EGPVT. feeds, clothes. houses, andeducates orphan boys. The cost per boy. per moath. Is ||ft-or. *2 30 per week. FATHER POGCI'S Is Ihe only Calholle or-pSianage for boy* In pagan EGPYT Wrile lo us.
D YOU TO BUILD A SCHOOL? For K MO-whal II costs (oione classroom in ihe USA -we can build a Calholje schoolIn a mission eoumry like INDIA
. . Can you gel 23 people f«give 1100 each? Or perhaps you'd like to build a school alt byyourself, as a memorial to your family, yourself, or a loved ene,VY rile to us.
H YOU Til FEED OLM REFUGEES? The Palestine Refugee(Arab*, tumi of them Catholic*’ hive lived lo refuge* rampfor 13 year* In LEBANON, SYRIA. JORDAN, and GAZA TiFEED A FAMILY FOR A MONTH rost* JiO-or, *2 50 a weekWrite lo u*.
□ YOU TO SEND YVHAT YOU CAN, WHEN YOU CAN? These"•iringiess gift*” we'll use where they're needed most; the]"save" us when emergencies arise. Write to us.
ImL<near'East(nissionsrt£i
FIANCIS CAIOiNAI {HUMAN, PresidentM*q« Jesepk T. lyee. Nesl Sec y
i-*< oil <•*»*■•< icetise* se:
CATMOIIC NEAR (AST WELFARE ASSOCIATIONABO Lexington Ava. at 46th St. New York 1 7, N. Y.
MOVIESMoral rafint by-the'-NM* Ytttk afti&br
&asrnational federation of CaKU? AlomSl.
- ■»■ - -fru
For further Information call: MA 3-3700 or AD 2 6900
Morally Unobjectionable for EveryoneAlakamm.
this ■u . * .
...Alakazam. the
Great
Babe* in ToylandBen HurBig Gamble
Cinerama HolidayComancheroiCowboyDavid & GoliathDay* of Thrill*
A LaughterDog of FlandersDonrii
El CidErrand BoyEverthlng's
DuckyFrancis of AssUt
Freckles
Greyfriar* BobbyGun* of NavaronoHand in HandInvasion QuartetJourney to Center
of Earth
King A I
Left. Right St
Center
Little Shepherdof KingdomCome
Lost WorldMan Trap
Midsummer
Night** Dream
Misty
Mysterious IslandNikkiOutlaw StallionPirates of
TortugaPurple Hill*RaymeReturn of RadmenRide Out for
RevengeRomanoff St
JulietSearch for
ParadiseSecond Time
AroundSecret of Monte
Crt»to
Sergeant Wa*Lady
Silent Call
Sink the BismarckSnow White St
3 Stooge*Summer to
Remember
TeenageMillionaire
Thief of BaghdadTom ThumbVoyage to Bottom
of Sea
White Christmas .*World Without .U
End
Unobjectionablefor Adults, Adolescents
BatUe atBloody Beach
Beware of
Children
Bridge to Sun
Bridge* at TokoHI
Cat BurglarColossus of
Rhode*Dawn at SocorroDeadly
Companion*
Death In SmallDoses
Devil at 4
O’clock
Elephant WalkFlower Drum
SongHouseboatJudgment at
NurembergKing* Go ForthKongaI-aw St Jake Wade
Legion of Loat
Man in MoonMaskMr. SardonlcusPocketful to
MiraclesPosse From HellSchool for
ScoundrelsScream of FearSecret of Deep
HarborSecret Partners
7 Little FoyaShane
Stalag 17Tension at Table
RockTo Hell St BackTrunk
20 Plu* 2
UnforgivenVillage of
DamnedVirtuous BigamlatYoung Savage*
Morally Unobjectionablefor AdultsAda
All in Night**Work
Armored
Command
Bachelor in
Paradise
Breakfast at
Tiffany**By Love
Possessed
ClaudelleInglish
Com* SeptemberExodus
3 Golden Hour*French MistressGreat WarHustlerInnocent*1. 2. 3
Please TurnOver
Plunderer*Rocco St Hi*
Brother*
Season of Passion7 Women From
Hell
SpartacusSummer St SmokeSusan Slade
3 on a SpreeThunder of
Drum*Tiger BayTown Without
PityTune* of Glory2 WomenUpstairs St
Downstair*West Side Story
Morally Objectionable in Part for EveryoneBack Street
Bimbo, the Great
Blood A Rose*
Carry on NurseExplosive
GenerationFrom Here to
Eternity
IndestructibleMan
JokerLove Ln Goldfish
BowlMad Dog CoUMarkMatter of Moral*
MinotaurMorgan. PirateParts BluesPicnic
Revolt of Slave*September StormSplendor in
Grass
Something WildTake
* Giant
Stop20.000 Eye*Wonder* of
AladdinWorld By Night
Separate ClassificationA. MP*r *t* cUMtflcatlon Is given to certain film* which whiis nn t
Ld Dole* VIU Kins of Kins.
CondemnedCold
-
wl.
nd ta * r.tprrw norveo Saturday Nliht Truth itjAugust Nmr on Sunday dr Sunday Verity)Morning
Book Review
Big FamilyAND THEN TOERE WERE
EIGHT, by Paul Molloy.Ilnubleday. IX9 paxes. $3.95.
When you combine writingtalent, a generous sense o(humor and intimate knowledgeof a very Interesting subject,how can you miss?
PAUL MOLLOY didn’t miss.He blended all those ingredi-ents skillfully. The product isa very humorous, warm storyof a man, bis wife and their
eight happy children.It is a biographical sketch
of the Molloy family. It touch-es on the important events intheir lives, but. more valu-
ably. it tells what kind of
people live in the Molloyhome. It tells how wonderfula big family can be. It also
tells of Molioy's climb throughthe newspaper ranks to his
present position as a TV col-umnist for a Chicago news-
paper.
llumor—sprinkled so gener-ously through the pages—isthe most obvious attraction.But the unfolding of the phi-losophy of Paul and Helen
Molloy In raising their family
is certain to appeal to every-one who has a larga family or
dreams of one.
Behind the laughter —andyou'll probably chuckle aloudseveral times—is the constantinjection of Molioy's belief indiscipline as the most valua-ble tool in child-raising. Hefeels that It is the greatestpossible manifestation of par-ental love.
ONE THING which shows
through his writing and mustpervade his whole family,making it the happy groupthat it is, is his ability to seethe good in things.
He can find fault when itexists, as his stand on severalsubjects such as Planned Par-enthood Leagues, bad TV anda false picture of suburbanites
are concerned. But he Is quickto sec and remember thegood things people did forhim through the years.
This is a family you’ll en-
joy meeting.—E.W.
THE FIRST Sodality of OurLady in the U. S. was estab-lished in New Orleans in 1738.
437 Building Completed in 10 YearsDuring this decade of growth
and expansion Catholics ofNorth Jersey completed no
less than 437 construction proj-ects as reported in the pagesof The Advocate since Janu-
ary, 1952.
High point of the construc-
tion saga was the completion,‘in 1954 of Sacred Heart Catho-
. dral, Newark, which had been
the dream of North JerseyCatholics in the area since
plans were conceived by theirfirst Bishop, James RooseveltBayley, in 1859.
IN THE FOUR counties ofthe Newark Archdiocese. 321
buildings were completed inthe past 10 years. In the young
Paterson Diocese, which was
formed in 1939 of three coun-
ties which were formerly partof the Newark Diocese, and
only 11 years old atof 1952, Catholics completed118 buildings.
The total of 437 bui dings,completely new or additions to
existing structures, dws not
include another tO/projoctswhich were renovations tomodernize and/or enlarge.
In addition Byzantine RiteCatholics built in Nofth Jer-
sey two churches, a school anda rectory during the decade.
DURING THESE 10 yearsthe post-war baby-cropreached school age, a largepart of the explanation for thefact that 131 of the new build-ings and additions were ele-mentary schools. They includ-ed 84 completely new schools,and 47 classroom-addingwings. Newark built 97 gradeschool buildings; Paterson, 34.
Seventy new convents andfour convent additions werebuilt to house the Sistersteaching in the many new
classrooms of North Jersey.And five orders and congrcga-
lions expanded their facilitiesfor training religious teachers.
BLT TIIE YOUNGSTERSwere by no means the onlyforce responsible for North
Jersey Catholic building boom,which included 09 new
churches and six church addi-tions with a total seating ca-
pacity of approximately 52,-000. Also. 49 new rectories amithree rectory additions werebuilt to accompany new-
church construction. One rea-son for this need was, obvious-ly. the jump in Catholic popu-lation by over 400,000 inthe Secs of Newark and Pater-son.
Another was population-shiftand new-area growth. No area
grew more rapidly than Ber-
gen County which led the con-
struction parade with 132 unitscompleted in 10 years. EssexCounty ranked next with 93pieces of construction, Pas-saic with 59, Hudson with 50,Morris with 47, Union with 46
\nd Sussex with 10. (Bergen,B&jcx, Hudson and Union com-
prisjjsthe Newark Archdiocese;Passaic, Morris and Sussex,the Paterson Diocese.)
A GREAT ADVANCE wasmade in high school construc-tion during the decade past.This phase of. the constructionscene involved 26 new highschool buildings and seven
high school additions, with six
more high schools planned or
under construction..Newark and Paterson each
record a climax in the con-
struction boom, and in bothcases new high schools fea-tured prominently as motiva-tion. In Newark the climax
was the Archdiocesan Develop-ment Campaign for the con-
struction boom, and in both
cases new high schools fea-tured prominently as motiva-tion. In Newark the climaxwas the Archdiocesan De-velopment Campaign for theconstruction of eight high
schools, four homes for agedand a seminary building, an-
nounced in late 1960. In Pat-erson it was the Diocesan De-
velopment Fund, launched in1955, which accomplished,among other things, the con-
struction of three new highschools, one in each county.
HIGHER EDUCATION was
not shunned by the buildingboom, which included ninenew college buildings, divided
among the four Catholic col-
leges of North Jersey. SetonHall University built a library,a science hall and a dormitoryon its South Orange campus
and plans anew student un-ion building: Caldwell Collegeadded a library, residence
building and classroom-labo-
ratory wing; St. Peter’s Col-
lege built a faculty residenceand a classroom building, andthe College of St. Elizabeth
completed an activities center.
Hospital construction, too,
was a big item during the ten-
year period 17 hospitalbuildings rose.
At least two of the plannednew construction projects are
part of an urban redevelop-ment program which falls inline with Title I assistance.
These are the proposed new
downtown campus of SetonHall and the proposed new St.Michael's Hospital, which are
part of the Newark redevelop-ment plan.
THROUGH THE DECADE
hardly an issue of The Advo-
cate has appeared withoutsome construction story —a
ground-breaking, a dedication,
an announcement of plans, a
fund-drive kickoff. In 1957, the
year of peak volume of con-
struction in Catholic North
Jersey, The Advocate inaugu-rated its annual Building Sup-plement to give each year a
comprehensive view of thegrowth of the brick and mor-
tar Church in North Jersey.The plan is to continue the
annual supplement until the
building boom has subsided In-to routine dimension*.
The 1961 Building Supple-ment announced that 48 piecesof construction had been dedi-cated during 1960 in Newarkand Paterson. Even more sig-nificantly, it reported that an
additional 80 building! were
either under construction or
on the planning boards.
Entering its second decade,The Advocate realizes that
part of its task will continueto be apprising its readers ofthe dimensions of their brickand mortar Church.
Anniversary Special
What’s in a Name?I his explassalion of the name, "The Advocate," written
by Msgr, John J. Dougherty, now president of Setnn Hall
University, appeared in the first issue, Dec. 30, 1951,
It is impossible to sum upa program in a word, but
men will not stop trying. A
name is a word and some-
thing more than a word. Itindicates a person, and sums
up what he stands for. Ifthere is any word that sums
up the Catholic faith, it is thename Christ. Think of Paul'ssummation: "For me to liveis Christ."
CHRIST is called the Advo-cate by St. John in his First
Epistle: “We have an advo-
cate with the Father, JesusChrist the just; and he is a
propitiation for our sins"(2:If). Jesus is our Advocatein heaven because He pleadsour cause with God. Thewounds of His glorified bodypreach the reconciliation ofthe Cross. This is what advo-cate means, one who pleadsthe cause of another. This
paper is called "The Advo-
cate" because it will pleadthe cause ol Christ.
Advocate has another
meaning: one who defends or
vindicates a cause, one whotries to convince others. Tbo
Holy Spirit is called the Ad-
vocate in the Gospel of St.John. He Is called Advocatebecause he will defend the
cause of Chrtst. Jesus said,"When the Advocate has
come ... the Spirit of Truth
...he will bear wltneaa con-
cerning me (15:26) . . . hewill convict the world of sin,and of justice, and of judg-ment" (16:7). The Spirit waa
to convince the Apostlesthemselves as Jesus prom-ised. "The Advocate, the HolySpirit, will teach you all
things, and bring to yourmind whatever I have said toyou" (14:26). By the promiseof Christ the Holy Spiritdwells with the Church for-
ever. The Spirit makes use
of instruments to defend the
cause of Christ. This journalis called "The Advocate" in
the fervent hope that It willbe an instrument of the HolySpirit in defending the causeof Christ and Ilia Church.
ADVOCATE has a thirdmeaning. It means interces-
sor. This is its meaning
when we say to Our Lady:"Turn then most graciousadvocate, thine eyes of mercytoward us
" W»h the confi-dence inspired by such a
rare and lovely Mother we
come to her at "Seat of Wis-dom" and beg her to inter-
cede for this infant journal.Our paper is called "The Ad-vocate" in honor of Our lady,Mary, the Mother of Jesus,and our "most graciousAdvocate."
IT IS IMPOSSIBLE to sum
up a program in a word, buta word can become the sym-bol of a program. May "TheAdvocate" be a symbol for a
paper that aspires to pleadthe cause of Christ with thehelp of the Holy Spiritthrough Mary's unceasing in-
tercession. This is our prayer.W* ask that it be yours.
This life-size wood
carving of Mary as
“Advocata Nostra"(Our Advocate) is inThe Advocate offices.Note type-stick at basewith The Advocate’s
masthead.
Films on TVFollowing Is ■ liat of film* on TV
Dec. 30-Jan. 3 There may he change*In some due to cuts for TV u%*. but
generally the original Legion of
Decency rating* may be acceptedas correct.
FOR THE FAMILYBlack Beauty MinesweeperBoy With Mr*. Miniver
Green Hair Navy WayCaptain From Pack Up Your
Kaepenick Trouble*Carefree Reach for
Down ln San SkyDiego Rulers of Sea
DragoonWells Sand
Massacre Sword St
IS Maiden DragonLane Sword of
Gateway Monte CrlatoGhoat Go** 3 Util* Girl*
West in Blue
Golden Hoof* ThunderGreen Grata Over Plaint
of Wyoming True to Lift
Hondo 20.000 MenLittle Joe. a Year
Wrangler Voice of
Love I* New* Bugle Ann
ADULTS, ADOLESCENTSAfter the Love Before
Thin Man Breakfast
Anthony Mr Blending*Advene Itukld* ID*
Bedlam Dream
('had Hanna HouseChin* Sky Nancy JKeele
Convoy I* MlMtngDote With Pin Up Girl
Disaster Reunion In
Dragon Fly France
Squadron She Demon*
Framed Time to Kilt
La*t Train We Who Are
From Madrid YoungOBJECTIONABLE
Affair In Mv SlHtrHavana Eileen
Bifamivt On Riviera
Gildervlrr**’* Petty Girl
Gbott Road toHuman Singapore
Devire tnderwatrrlady of Woman They
Ilurlr%qur ,\lmo«t
Ministry of lonrhrdFear
CONDEMNEDLight Arru»a
Street
December 28, 1961 THE ADVOCATE 23
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BEST WISHES FOR THE FUTURE OFTHE ADVOCATE
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IndulfiencvHMembers of the Aposto-
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a plenary indulgence underthe ordinary conditions on:
Jan. 1, Octave of Christmas.A partial indulgence of
100 days may be gained for
each act of chanty or pietyperformed for the intentionof fostering vocations to thepriesthood.
Adult Church
o‘°«* Cotholi* Tout*. In*., of CliftonMiiheul «p»t or obligation, a
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DAILY
CHRISTMAS
wax
The newest
adventure!
/X\\\l ■•■////
fCIHMUISMII N.
SEARCH FORPARADISE
■Kins m uu i«i all rtnouuauil-v 7 JO
l*W|* Ut.loo tM. Sa JXJ
Feast of The Octave of Christmas
NDN YEAR'S EVE
+*Xa*A
ST. FRANCISof ASSISI
I MATtOMALMM«| OTrf. AMTMOM**
NIW YEAR'S DAY MASSES
2:30, 4, 3.4,7,1. 9. *11,30, 12.30 lower Church10, 11, 12, 12:43 •11,00 AM. High Mo..
Evening 3,13 ond 6:00 P.M.
ST. FRANCIS of ASSISI133 WIST 3Tit ST. {and West 32nd Sl|
* I BdwMfl 6th & 7th Avonow)lcnuAcnl
mwrom t. H. *.
NEW YEAR’S EVE
HOUR OF REPARATION
before the
BLESSED SACRAMENT
with
THE DOMINICAN NUNS
at
Rosary Shrine of Perpetual Adoration
Springfield Ave. at Morris Ave.
SUMMIT, N. J.
SUNDAY, DEC. 31st 3:30*4:30
PAX
VISIT
THE
ROSARY
SHRINE
Personal Blessings for the Sick
Presther:
The Very Reverend J. J. MeLwney, 0.P., S.T.M.
Sermon:
AULDE ACQUAINTANCE and EVER NEW
iA
°/cPIR ANNUM
QUARTERLY
Anticipated Dividend tor tha Quarter
Beginning January 1, 1962
AIL ACCOUNTS TO 510.000.00
HAYES SAVINGSAND LOAN ASSOCIATION
955 BROAD STREETNIWANK a. N. J. • MAAM 9-0689
CCD Training CoursesTo Begin Spring Session
NEWARK The teachertraining courses of the Confra-ternity of Christian Doctrinewill begin their spring sessionthe week of Jan. 7 in sevencenters of the archdiocese.
Attendance at the 13-weekDoctrine course is a partialrequirement for a certificateto teach in the parish Confra-ternity Schools of Religion.Adults who completed a
course In methods last No-vember will receive a certifi-cate at the end of the springsession. New registrations willbe accepted for those whowish a refresher course inChristian Doctrine. The fee of$3 includes textbooks. There isno other cost.
THE CENTERS for thecourses and class schedulefollows:
Tuesdays. 7:30-9:30 p.m.,starting Jan. 9 at St. John'sSchool, Bcrgcnficld; St. Mi-chael’s School. Cranford: andSt. Augustine's School, UnionCity. Wednesdays. 7:30-9:30p.m., starting Jan. 10 at Mt.Carmel School. Bayonne; Sc-ton Hall University, South Or-ange; and Little FlowerChurch auditorium, BerkeleyHeights. Thursdays, 7:30-9:30p.m., starling Jan. It. at St.Andrew’s School, Westwood.
THE ROSARY and a stararc the emblems of St. Dom-inic.
Increase in World UnityCreates ObligationsHardly anyone . knew what
was happening in another partof the world 100
years ago,while today, each morning we
are in contact, through the
news, with the entire world.Does not this increase of unitycreate obligations?
If our next door neighbor isill or hungry, does that not
create a duty? If a fellowCatholic is languishing in pris-on in China or northern Viet-nam, or northern Korea, are
not we in some way behindprison bars?
If a speck gets into our eyes,does not our whole body suf-fer? Can wc hear of the needsof the rest of the world with-out increasing our responsibili-ty?
The missionaries aim to helpthe poor of the world. Won't
you help, too? Send your of-ferings to the Holy Father'sown organization the Socie-ty for the Propagation of theFaith, and start the New Yearright.
Charity Results
In ConversionsIn his Christmas greetings to
the Society for the Propaga-tion of the Faith, Rev. JamesJackson. M.M., explains thatin Japan Christmas "is cele-brated not as a religius holi-
day, but as a time to live it
up. Your prayers and sacri-fices will help us to preachabout the true meaning of this
day which commemorates the
beginning of anew era."
The city of NaTtahama is the
scene of a Maryknoll mission,where a parish unit is takingform. Sisters will soon -be in-stalled and a school es-
tablished, and Father Jackson
hopes to erect -a tabernacle inthe building now used as a
church so that the BlessedSacrament can be reservedthere in the near future.
One of the mission highlightsof the past year. Father Jack-son writes, was the conversion
of two old ladies from Kuroda.One was 93 and the other isher daughter.
‘‘We discovered them," he
states, "living in a warehousein which wealthy people usedto keep their valuables. It had
no windows; just one door
kept open for light and air toenter their dingy cubicle.
"THE YOUNGER woman,
although suffering from TB ofthe bone and her hands and
legs were crippled, made pad-dings for coat shoulders. Thiswork brought in about 30 yena day. This, with a small
compensation from the gov-ernment. enabled them to
keep body and soul together.Our catechist took them pack-ages of surplus American food
and old clothes regularly and
soon was %blc to get across
to them the doctrine of the
Catholic Church.
“Just before Christmas last
year they cave the catechista Christmas donation of 500
yen, but we managed to getit back to them without them
knowing it. At Easter timethey were baptized. It was
truly a miracle of grace, es-
pecially as the elder one hadpracticed Buddhism for near-ly 90 years.
"Cater they helped pick tea
on the mission property; a jobtoo strenuous for them butthey insisted they do so in ap-preciation of their faith. Then,the Christians got together andcleaned out their warehouse
home, repaired the inside andput in a window for ventila-tion. Although this was not in-tended as a publicity stunt,our efforts to help the olderladies sent our stock in thatvillage soaring. It was a ser-
mon on charity the villagerswill not soon forget.”
Society for the Propagationof the Faith
Archdiocese of Newark:
Most Rev. Martin W. Stanton, S.T.D., Ph. I)., LL.D.31 Mulberry St., Newark 2, N. J. Phone MArkct 2-2803Hours: Daily, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Saturday, 9 a.m. to 12.
Diocese of Paterson:
Rt. Rev. Msgr. William F. Louis
24 DcGrasse St., Paterson 1, N. J. Phone: ARmory 4-0400Hours: Daily, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Saturday, 9 a.m. to 12.
Donations to the Society for the Propagation of theVaitb arc income tax deductible.
Christmas
In AfricaHere is a mission that cclc~
brates Christmas in the besttradition. "It is truly a joy-ous season,” writes Rev. A.Vollmcr, 0.M.1, Vicar Gener-al ol the Diocese of Kimber-
ley. South Africa. "It is not a
day for turkey dinners, candyand Christmas trees. No, it ismore. It is first and foremosta religious feast. It is 'Christ’sMass*."
"It is not a season of greet-ing cards," continues BishopVollmcr. "of TV stories, of
stockings hung up at the fire-place for Santa Claus. Weeksbefore Christmas the peoplepractice Christmas carols and
High Mass. Children look forferns to decorate the Christ-
mas crib. The mission churchis cleaned until it sparkles.
"ON CHRISTMAS Eve. pcopic leave their huts early andwind their way on foot to themission. By to o'clock a longqueue is waiting for confes-
sion. Our African people singthe Midnight Mass with greatenthusiasm. There is not much
they can oficr the Infant Sa-viour of this world's gifts, but
they themselves are complete-ly His.
"When the Feast of Epiph-any arrives they are veryproud and happy to see theBlack King right beside theDivine Child. And so the sea-
son of Christmas comes andgoes, but it never loses its
magic spell for our African
people."God love and bless you al-
ways. and may I wish you a
Happy New Year with Mary!"
Mission Work
Pays Dividends
In Southern Vietnam thenumber of converts last yearwas M.770. If conversions inthe U. S. were the same in
relationship to the population,we would have had last year12 million converts instead of130.000. These numbers provethat the missions represent anexcellent spiritual investmentfor the salvation of souls.
Population Gain
HERNE. Switzerland (NC)—Switzerland's Catholic popula-tion has climbed to 2,473,000and now stands at 45.5%, a
gain of 3.0% in 10 years.
CONVOCATION SPEAKERS: Eileen Hoolan of Paterson and David Duerr of Mor-ristown presented papers at the convocation of the Paterson division of Seton HallUniversity Dec. 22. They are shown with Msgr. Thomas J. Gillhooly, left, dean ofthe Paterson branch, and Msgr. John J. Dougherty, president of Seton Hall Uni-
versity.
Priest Nominated for Civic AwardJERSEY CITY - Rev. Jo-
seph C. Faulkner. S.J.,spiritual director of El CentroCatolico for Puerto Ricanshere, has been nominatedby the combined civic andservice clubs of Jersey Cityfor their annual brotherhoodaward.
A native of Lodi, FatherFaulkner was ordained in 1943and came to Jersey City aboutsix years ago as a teacherat St. Peter’s Prep, his almamater, as well as director of
the Puerto Rican Center.The award will be presented
in February.The clubs also nominated
Rev. Robert Castle, a localProtestant minister.
24 the advocate December 28, 1961
CONGRATULATIONS TO
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Since 1926
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Mr. LC. Gorny Jr., Mgr. Mr. J. W. Krowicki, Mgr.
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!««• t Utilmiu, Preei.tilt FNAIMACV
bitbUiM ouer 30 )iiri►«« Heemered Phermernie
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CnKitrUnu CeilluUy
CumiMnindrdPr<4l rirtiuui CnuKUti
Sub Hoom liupphci•»« Conlltl A,. . WtlHlold VIAM
NUTLEY
*AV oauos co.it«Mt aitcie. In. *h*r.
■Ally NnAirnwnMiw PiouMlr rilled
end Cottaeuce
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WEEK-END RETREATS
FOR THE LAITYSPEND A WEEKEND WITH OOD
For: MEN, WOMEN,HUSBAND and WIFE
Now Y#ori Rtlrnl Por Womm
Dtc. 39 . Jon 1 - I Days
Husband 1 Wifi - Jan. 24-2 RConducted by tb* monks •<
Saint Paul's AbbayPitas* makt rtstrvollons tarly.
Writ* for Information tot
DIRECTOR OF RETREATS
Outtn of Ptott Rttrtal Hosts*
St. Poufs Abbty. Ntwton. NJ.
ST. ZITA is the patron saintof maids.
As LongAs You Live70a will receive ■DEPENDABLE andGOOD INCOME II
rou invest your uv
ill In ourS.V.D. ANNUITYPLAN.
You also share In thetreat work of the Missionsand help In educatingPriests and Brothers fortha Missions.
o Certain tax advantages.• A Lasting Memorial and .remembrances In many"Masses and prayers.
WIITI FOR FREE INFORMATION!
SOCIETY OFTHE DIVINE WORD
Annuity Dept. GIRARD. PA.
In Time of Need
Consult Your Catholic Funeral Director
Whose carefuland understandingservice is in accord with
the traditions of Holy Mother Church
I BERGEN COUNTY |HENNESSEY
FUNERAL HOME
232 KIPP AVENUEHASBROUCK HEIGHTS, N. J.
ATlas 8-1362
TRINKA FUNERAL SERVICE
MAYWOOD - BOGOTA
,LITTLE FERRY
HUbbard 7-3050
JOHN J. FEENEY & SONS
232 FRANKLIN AVENUE
RIDGEWOOD, N. J.
Gilbert 4-7650
CLIFFORD H. PEINECKE1321 TEANECK ROAD
WEST ENGLEWOOD, N. J.
FRANCIS X. FAHEY,Manager
TE 7-2332
THOMAS J, DIFFILY
41 AMES AVENUE
RUTHERFORD, N. J.
WEbster 9-0098
ESSEX COUNTY
DECAPUA FUNERAL HOME
269 MT. PROSPECT AVE.
NEWARK, N. J.
HUmboldt 2-3333
GEORGE AHR t SON
700 NYE AVENUEIRVINGTON, N. J.
ESsex 3-1020
REZEM FUNERAL HOME579 Grove Street
Irvington, N. J.
ESsex 2-8700
STANTON FUNERAL HOME661 FRANKLIN AVENUE
NUTLEY, N. J.
NOrth 7-3131
MURPHY MEMORIAL HOME
102 FLEMING AVENUENEWARK, N. J.
MArket 3-0514
JOHN F. MURPHY480 SANFORD AVENUE
NEWARK, N. J.
ESsex 3-6053
JOHN J. QUINN
FUNERAL HOME
323-329 PARK AVENUE
ORANGE. N. J.
ORange 3-6348
FRANK McGEE525 SUMMER AVENUE
NEWARK. N. J.
HUmboldt 2-2222
MURRAY
FUNERAL SERVICEMICHAEL J. MURRAY,
Director206 BELLEVILLE AVENUE
BLOOMFIELD. N.J.
PI 3-2527
MURPHY FUNERAL HOME
GRACE MURPHY. Director301 ROSEVILLE AVENUE
NEWARK, N. J.
HUmboldt 3-2600
OPACITY
FUNERAL HOME
Michael J. Murray, Mgr.722 Clinton Avenue
Newark 8, N. J.
EStex 4-6677
WOZNIAKMEMORIAL HOME
320-22 Myrtle Avenue
Irvington, N. J.
Conrad & Ray Woxnlak,Director*
EStex 3-0606
OORNY A OORNY
MORTUARY303 MAIN STREET
EAST ORANGE, N. J.
ORange 2-2414
I. V. MUHIN ft SON
976 BROAD STREET
NEWARK, N. J.
MArket 3-0660
PETER J. QUINN
Funeral Director
320 BELLEVILLE AVENUEBLOOMFIELD, N. J.
Pilgrim 8-1260
CORNY A OORNY
MORTUARY
369 BROAD STREET
BLOOMFIELD, N. J.
Pilgrim 3-8400
FLOOD FUNERAL HOMEAndrew W. Flood, Mgr.
112 So. Munn Ave.
Eat! Orange, N. J.
ORange 4-4445
MArket 2-2530
KIERNAN FUNERAL HOME
101 UNION AVENUE
BELLEVILLE, N. J.
Plymouth 9-3503
CODEY’S FUNERAL SERVICE
69 HIGH STREET
ORANGE, N. J.
ORange 4-7554
HUELSENBECKMEMORIAL HOME
1108 So. Orange Ave.
Newark 6, N. J.Korl W. Hueltenbeck
DirectorEStex 2-1600
CODEY'S FUNERAL SERVICE77 PARK STREET
MONTCLAIR, N. J.
Pilgrim 4-0005
HUDSON COUNTY
HOWARD J. BRENNAN
6414 BERGENIINE AVE.
WEST NEW YORK, N. J.
UNIon 7-0373
james a. McLaughlin
591 JERSEY AVENUE
JERSEY CITY. N. J.
Oldfield 3-2266
WILLIAM SCHIEMM, INC.
539 BERGEN AVE.
JERSEY CITY. N. J.
JOHN J. CARTY,MANAGER
HEnderton 4-0411
EARL F. BOSWORTH
311 WILLOW AVENUE
HOBOKEN. N. J.
OLdfield 9-1455
Oldfield 9-1456
NECKER-SHARPE
FUNERAL HOME
525 45th STREET
UNION CITY, N. J.
UNIon 7-0820
UNion 7-0120
RIEMAN FUNERAL HOME
1914 NEW YORK AVENUEUNION CITY, N. J.
UNion 7-6767
LEBER FUNERAL HOME
20lh ST. & HUDSON BLVD.
UNION CITY, N. J.
UNion 3-1100
WILLIAM SCHLEMM, INC.2200 HUDSON BLVD.
UNION CITY, N. J.
WILLIAM SCHLEMM,MANAGER
UNion 7-1000
MORRIS COUNTY
SCANLAN
FUNERAL HOMES781 Newark Pompton Tpk.
Pompton Plaint, N. J.
TE 5-4156
SH 2-6433
BERMINOHAM
FUNERAL HOME
249 SOUTH MAIN STREETWHARTON. N. J.
FOxcroft 6-0520
PASSAIC COUNTY
HENNESSEY FUNERAL HOME171 WASHINGTON PLACE
PASSAIC, N. J.
PReicott 7-0141
OORNY l OORNY
MORTUARY519 MARSHALL STREET
PATERSON, N. J.
MUlberry 4-5400
GORMLEY FUNERAL HOME154 WASHINGTON PLACE
PASSAIC, N. J.
PReicott 9-3183
QUINLAN FUNERAL HOME
27-29 HARDING AVENUE
CLIFTON, N. J.
PReicott 7-3002
UNION COUNTY
MIIIER-BANNWORTHFUNERAL HOME
1055 EAST JERSEY ST.
ELIZABETH, N. J.
Elizabeth 2-6664
GORNY ft OORNY
MORTUARY
330 ELIZABETH AVENUE
ELIZABETH, N. J.Elizabeth 2-1415
MASTAPETER
FUNERAL HOMES
400 FAITOUTE AVI.
ROSELLE PARK, N. J.CHeitnut 5-1558
Elizabeth 3-4855
For lilting In thli lection call The Advocate. MArket 4-0700
Pray for Them
Thomas F. McNultyCLIFTON A Solemn Re-
quiem Mass was offered Dec.21 at St. Clare's Church forThomas F. McNulty, 72, whodied Dee. 1!) in St. Mary'sHospital.
A native of Harrison, he hadresided In Clifton for 21 years.
Surviving are five (laughters,including Sister Mary Ber-tram! of St. John's. Paterson,two sisters and five grand-children.
Mrs. C. O'Sullivan
BAYONNE A Solemn Re-
quiem Mass was said at St.Vincent's Church on Dee. 19
for Mrs. Cornelius O'Sullivan,82. who died at Bayonne Hos-
pital Dee. 16 after a short ill-
ness.
She was a native of Irelandand had lived in Bayonne forover SO years, being a mem-
ber of the Third Order of St.Francis and the Rosary So-ciety at St. Vincent’s. She
was also a charter member ofSt. Vincent's parish.
Surviving are two sons, in-cluding Dr. Clement C. O'Sul-livan of tnc faculty of St. Pet-er's Prep, Jersey City; a
daughter, three priest neph-ews. Rev. Cuthbert Murphy,O. Carol.. of Tarrytown, N.Y.,Rev. Robert O'Leary of SURose of Lima, Newark, andRev. Sean Murphy of CountyCork, Ireland; and a cousin.Rev. Daniel Murphy, assistantsuperintendent of schools inthe Archdiocese of Newark.
Mrs. Marcel CuruuJERSEY CITY - A Solemn
Requiem Mass was offered on
Dec. 26 at Sacred HeartChurch for Mrs. Marcel Curau,who died Dec. 22 at St.Michael's Hospital, Newark.
She was a lifelong residentof Jersey City and a memberof the Rosary Society at Sa-cred Heart. Surviving are herhusband, one son, a brotherand three sisters, includingSister Rita Genevieve of St.Paul of the Cross, Jersey City.
Mrs. Leroy HullinHOBOKEN A Solemn Re-
quiem Mass was offered Dee.22 at Our Lady of GraceChurch for Mrs. Leroy Hullin,34, who died of a heart attackon Dec. 18 while at work.
Mrs. Hullin was a native ofHoboken and had moved to
Englewood Cliffs two yearsago. She is survived by her
husband, her parents, threebrothers and five sisters, in-
cluding Sister M. VirginiaAloysius. O. Carm , of theMary Manning Walsh Home,New York City, and Sister M.Xavier Francis, O. Carm., ofSt. Joseph's Seminary, Dun-
woodic, N. Y.
Sally H. M arti
NEWARK A Solemn Re-
quiem Mass was offered on
Dec. 23 at St. Rose of Lima
Church for Sally H. Ward,who died onDee. 20 at Presby-terian Hospital after a longillness.
She was a lifelong resident
of Newark and a member ofCourt Seton, Catholic Daugh-
ters of America, and the Ros-
ary Society of St. Rose ofLima.
Surviving are a brother
and a sister, Sister lnnoccnlia
of St. Antoninus, Newark.
Irish Brothers Honor Founder at MeetingNEWARK Tribute was
paid to Brother Edmund Igna-tius Rice, founder of the IrishChristian Brothers, at the 19thannual education conferenceof the Eastern Regional Unitof the Council on Educationon Dee. 27 at Essex Catholic
High School.Theme of the conference
was "Quality Teaching A
Rcdcdication to the SpiritWhich Animated Our Found-er." Brother James 11. Vaugh-an, F.S.C.H., chairman, re-
minded the 400 Brothers andlay teachers from 20 institu-tions in the metropolitan area
that, on Oct. 25 this year
Archbishop J. C. McQuaid ofDublin was appointed to con-duct the process concerningthe beatification of BrotherRice.
IN HIS ADDRESS, Brotherw- V’. Penny, F.S.C.IL, pro-' tncial, said of Brother Rice,"A study of his life revealshim as a man who was deeplyspiritual, progressive and far-seeing. If he were not deeply
spiritual, he would not havesold all that he had and givento the poor to follow IllsMaster. If he were not pro-gressive, he would not hnvofounded the congregation, butrather lie would have retiredto a monastery on the conti-nent and worked out his sal-vation in the contemplativeway, as he was tempted to do.If he were not far-seeing, hecould not have developed, andbequeathed to us. a tradition
and a spirit so much in ac-
cordance with the wishes ofPope Pius XII as enunciatedin his well-known program ofadaptation and renewal.”
Three faculty members ofEssex Catholic were amongthose who chaired subject-area panels at the confer-ence: Brother J. R. Kelly,I.S.C.H., and J. B. Murray insocial studies and Brother E.B. O'Brien in classical lan-guages.
Who's Who Pick
LATROBE, Pa. John E.Butensehoen of Hillside, presi-dent of the senior class at St.Vincent College, has been
Sjdected for inclusion in the191 k edition of "‘Who's Who InAmerican Colleges and Univer-
sities.”
December 28, lf)6l Tlf E A D V OCATE 25From
HACKENSACK MUTUAL SAVINGS
..‘Ssiytf'ygl ' *r
f ; ? ‘J> w. f,'v*'
r^ ? _
tm
To
THE ADVOCATE
Happy 10th Anniversary
The high standards of your
newspaper make it a pleasureto use your advertising pages.
HACKENSACK MUTUAL SAVINGSAND LOAN ASSOCIATION
242 STATE ST.co«ni« SALEM HACKENSACK, N. J. fCrrm^MCUWACKJCLOEIT lINAKCUI INSTITUTION 'l.'fffl
N* MU| Neat ?• 0«*Off** Ma«4«y f
RENTAL TRAILERS
FOR LOCAL USE
Rack Trallara Van TrallaraBoat Trallara Marta TrallaraOfflca Trallara Car Carrlar
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and Munrina.(Maka your raaaraatlona aarly)
Tear Bart—Applianca Hand Trucktliavaa Lanlarnt Ito Chain
Far CarnalnaTrallar Mllahai inalallad an
All Ttaa Cart
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FORD 1957
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Ro« CSC. E Diana., N. 1. or railollanfe CICCI
Homemaker lor motharlaaa home 1arhool aaa bora parman.nl portionlor malur*. aaporloncod woman Eareltenl rompanaallon In romlorlablah..m« In n.arlir Jtnn communityMu.l aland naul In.e.tMation WrllaR<>» l». The Adeocela. 31 Clinton SI..Newark t. N. J.
WIDOWER aeeka houwk.apar. plainrookm*. vary lishl houiekaaptn*. Carai your dlapoaal al any lima. Tima oil.(ood Catholic homo. Clilion. thraoamall children boy and airla 3 and *.I law In. Relaranroa Wrlla Raa 121.Tho Advocala. 31 Clinton hi. Newark
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BUSINESS DIRECTORY
ALUMINUM PRODUCTS
SIIMNII a STORM WINDOWS A DOORSPorch EM I.OM HEN • ALTERATIONS
Jeiouaiee . »<i.»ni • A-nma.
a Venetian Btmda
F. H. LONGOCall 1C hour, a day. liao eatlmate
TE S33JO
tm lIAMHCKG TPK.poMPTON CALLS WAYNE
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J.i
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radio ratcviKiuN. inn. stereo.P A AMPI.iriER. TAPS RECORDER,PHONIMi ltd'll AND AUTOMATICrecord changer service.
SERVICE INArttaatda • LjrndhuraC . K.arnylUrruww . ItlMhath
ir.i
111 Mi 1 JIU
AUTO SERVICE ft REPAIRS
G. M. Trontmitflon ServicePtiaiouih. roiil. t'fcovrolot. Hsii/H. old.
"ft 1*- •»> m*k» .uto• 111 In.ull t 'otttlll Irtn.miMtofl. tut,
J > ewe no•n. HI Una*. l-do* wntM. SI Mol j
*l • *«*«*•( for nim nil MlI UU. Ii A M . • r. u
WAYNE TRANSMISSIONSERVICE
H*Mn> •• all oulomolirIroUKiulMl
Loo tthiilv • No/ NikuiiII Mm*,a ki. UiiM, K V.
Ullait « ivon
HOME IMPROVEMENTS
GUTTER PROBLEMS?A >oo otoßiinua (utltro iit.ulled (or 1•*** <»*• MM OUU.IO ><<,UHl<ol i
* i*»» C-. 11 u !MILL Oliti J«. HL I oils Wool Oi
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Aluminum Anninot(wluiwn Wuidon a
inmro . Voaoiloa Iliad.Aluminum fculm. , J.iou.iot.
roiok tHtbooiel....
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It/miaol >«ui jNURSING HOME
In Newark, N.J.ABBEY NURSING HOME
i oMfirtt nuivickMol* nwi«lra«i, rluiiiuially |U
86 VAN NESS PLACE
‘Off (Union Avo I
Bigelow 3 0303
BUSINESS DIRECTORY
NURSING HOMES
LAUREL MANOR-A CIKIIVUU HOMEfor elderly m»n and womeni ctoae at-UnUon and carei rater reaarpablei El nvwood MIOS. P.O. Box 130. Sprtof Valloy. Now York.
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DO YOU WANT TO MAKE MONEYFOR YOUR PARISH OR CLUB? ? ?
Our Mllltorr Sand will play a concert,for a tllxhi fea, Your oroaniiatlon aellatha tlckata and kaepa all Uio profilePhono WEbater 9J038. Mr. Win. Schllp.dlroctor.
PIANOS • ORGANS
WE BUY AND SILLNEW and USED PIANOS and ORGANS
ROBBIE'S MUSIC CITY314 Rout# 40, Warn# CL S-1717
Paaaalc PR *74ft4Hackonaack HU P-1121
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REAL ESTATE AGENTS
CHATHAM
CHATHAMTo buy or Mill in Chatham TownshipMadiaon and Klorham Park callMILLICENT M, UNDERWOOD
Realtor"Mambar Multiple Llalinc Santee"
1110 Main Street. Chatham ME 3-7300
LAKE HOPATCONG
REST BUY~ SEX-
BEATRICE BRADY, REALTOR
Office. Wool Shore. Opp Oolf Couria iPhono 3000040 Keep. 3011OVU
MORRIS COUNTY
CARLTON J. BRUEN,Realtor
1? Elm St. JE JE mil
MORRIS IIt'NTER onto WARREN• cr'hniES
JAMES V. 01 rrv AsonerMain St. Cheater. N. J. TK 91300
C««nima ilL'rrar » 1300
MOUNTAIN LAKES
MULLINS • RASMUSSIN INC.
|m. H ML tilw PE 4-MOO
I Sanders & Bracken, RealtorsOn* BouliviH Mountain Lafco
DECItFIEl !» 4 111*
MOUNTAIN LAKES & VIC.N«» "li*tln*t" eompltn »Uh photo*.
KIINTRUP. INC.* Realtor
ISO Hl.d lOK HI M> l>E 4nsno
_800 lEt'tlo tl "ISO" H4nc« ISIS
RITA B. MURPHY"tn W Main <t| n«iM, N. I
in: 4 ins
NUTLEY
BUY NOW SEt.l. OH TRADEINVESTIGATE Ol II TRADE IN CI.AN*• »11l lift your homo for Ml*, orconudtr burnt* II U you ytuduH tnolhoy houto through our olftro totut knao your rruuiromont* Etritlng*tnd lloliiloyt roll Mr* Kelly WE 4BH.
STANLEY JOHNSONSS High HU Null**. NO TOO*
OAKLAND
FLEEN MrKENSA. REAI.TOR4* lUotttiho Hltd Oakland
Mdcrll 7 *ll4
RIDGEWOOD
GIISENAN & COMPANY"Oi l* REFUTATION In VOi'll
CIAHAMIC «i»* £ATtWACTION*t«« Imiiui at himl
j ... rropoitia, |H Italian CountJr!I9 i: Itidcauomt Ait C,t J|«o9
. Buiimm A Htu.lrMialI Oiopattiea fur aak r»U Itio Malta*i Alanrt I■‘all..!. »1 Noitl. It.call Mlaat.
j Mnlltnoual S J o|. J Slot
HllMieWiMiti 4 VN INITVI M'K • o|.|.|.t111 ror TUM.SKRH
OWf SOO MtlTtm: USTIMikj HtTHCNri HKAI. ESTATE «il Jua*»
IMI haOlin Ala RutitaiiuJ
__
OHfc-N 7 l*AYk AM* tUMViri_
RUTHERFORD
FRED P. KURGANICt Ku.iari In ka. Men an
Heritor41 r*ik Atenuf, Hutlte.lu.if
WE #«**>
SUSSEX COUNTY
Hr Al | >Ut* |n»UI«A« •Uke |‘i tic •
Aimth & hI.STk.IK| l.o4il|U» \ C J
TEANECK
HoWkt: KfAl.rV#44 Pilluttl AM . ftattack
It 01010 ft iSII
UNION
In t molt lou.it> 4 »ait oun.i.ng rtertat u> hrln >uu tu taket a home furtour eomfurt atif hai>i>ina»Our ctrtaiitnra tt taut muieiuun Urburr or Mil, C*U as
JOHN P MtMAHON1*44 Worm ait. kill # Ji>»
REAL ESTATE AGENTS
WAYNE
John vvms CO., RratlorIWi raioroon Hamburg Tpka. Warn*.
ox *tioo
WEST MILFORD.
Y»»r Round A llomttat Plnacttffa Uka
Salat 4 Ranuta
EDWARD A. CASEY,Realtor
I 13 Union Voter Rood PA OOS9I
LAND WANTED
' LARGE TRACTS or ESTATESI HutUblf for rv«td*f»U«l aub-dhritlon.
; mdutlrr or rommarrui atvalopmanl«nr*h*rn in N’aw Jtrtajr.
Ed. J. Fongyo, Broker
1341 Hamburg To*. *<m OX 04.10#
REAL ESTATE FOR SALE
lake properties
AT OHKIIN PONII. I ARK TAMARACKfpd M.‘tr pr*«afa Ufcta In NorUnrnNrw Jiran Yaar v*«nd and ■ummrrhome* c,.inrnrni!i naar PIUIW,N*»»fk ami Nt* Yofl Clip Yaar.roundhomr* from Il0.v» Humanar roliaftafrom lijun
BUCKLEY A. WHEELER, BrokerRoulr H, NootovndUnd N J.
OX 33100 In. OX 30103
FARMS • HOMES - ESTATES
New 3 BedroomRANCH HOMES
from $14,700TOWN & LAKE REALTY
ELIZABETH
niUiT TlklK \I>VKMTUet>
8 ROOM COLONIALImlwiiu Iron!Ht« 4 h*lh »n4 in tatrmrin.hmr kiurwn. tt»t **f*«r. 30000 lai
Itmtenirnl larauoa imlr 1 hlarktI|M» M «<lux>| IHmirunhnnl MuUai Mm
l*U»— I HUM >wi» <»n»llMil MM IMI it
incext x mUSm <NKAI.TON I II tm
MrUHtH N. 1, kIiiNTCAOK MA.NKfcANMUMIATION
PACKANACK LAKE
ImntmtMla (InMMn —3 Ilf krillI »*»• Uli* Urttl t kllcMl. fiKlUM*. Onn IkHIBUtM M kllhl.UIM k*r Mm ».ih I.IMUII. 1 in <•>
•*r. crtlrr. t**wk A iiuiulr iimiim
Ui*r AIM mm Mat, riMil #M
nwiMt
IMM » IT. rln »Hr».Orea la* immilwi 1 <m» • »e«k
frit l»k minAt.TON II ImtUNfiM* CO
SMOKEMI' » DM t*rr rkrrvrrk I ft.
ROSELLE PARK
NEW 3FAMILYNVAM limn mi loot. AH|t
» A >. I CAM MAMlor to * 100
f*n Or n*l» i« mi« ia fc» AMill|k>nl <r«|l w t ui Mil *««f,
k| foil 14kill >»u<M ■ Or* tt Ho*
vistk-vr a uuii.ii co.Mr.kl.ToH • ■■ Itimto Mtitn V
SPARTA
P, M ‘»
HOUSE OP THE YEAR|t>u*Hf4 ki • imliiim ml oin m<Mlr>lr nul fflliln<4 IM nahrluthnl I*Mur! Ihr kllk Wm4«IO ml
FOX HOLLOW FARMSn«* Mmw 1 kulhr mlmr fitkill hr« »nh #*' Ml uHMii •• « |Vnin«n fain purllnl ia link nrkimwA Ahum lnuli from Milk (nr»U«* lull fcrwimi Minnie Jm
MrkM «#l toiua m in mr M in
FOX HOLLOW FARMS111 IMWIt CAUi
E C. ANDERSON. REALTOR
MIIIM Irk* klrhrMk • fcrriu An*lit is t ram ml Ifri'i l*A »»i*i
BETTER HOMESLAKE MOHAWK:
3 H M **- I »,*«* t «l4Miu| mi
tort** Atl«p -x
i H h kliitc f«M«R| - otlukt|«iM if***m, M«| U»« M |vs(hmm
FOX HOLLOW FARMS.3 It K | h*ih Itrkrk. 1 ImrUft* s
Irattlf IMM m Min. Will)
I ■> II I tf. h hratk t Irmilt iimni a. fin kU*lil» MM I Ml*
HUM
liliWil *n« llilt Olt*l» Thltl
E G ANDERSON. RealtorMi IS kmil* fruler I*A »*!•!
SKYLINE LAKE
By 15th of MONTH
Earn from the Ist1 st
MR ANNUM
COMPOUNDED
QUARTIRIY
4.
All ACCOUNTS
INIURID TO
SI 0.000
SAVI IT MAIL
W*pay poilog*
bs'b
SAVINGS AND LOAN ASS’N.120 So. Oranfi Avo., Niwtrk ),N. J.
BIG GRIPFOR
SMALL CARSTubaless
Mud And
Snow Tires
For CompactsAnd Imports
t
s ls®°TO
$177°
Fit all compact and import cars.
Sizes from 5.20x13 to 6.00x15* Rayon, blotkwoll. Plu, l 0« 0„d old ||„ >ou, , of
Tut on Suburbanite Winter Tires and gethoavy-cnr grip and go in slush, mud, or snow.
liuy now while nil sizes and types are stillavailable.
GOODYEARMom ptoPLi met on aooovtAN tmii
than on any other rind
LANE’S INC.649 COMMUNIPAW AVE., JERSEY CITY
DE 3-6300
; • > • • •(J f
happy thought ;
V?!
■\v>.
.•
on your 10th anniversary
"More of Everything For Everyone”
26 THE ADVOCATE December 28, 1061
ALLXANDLR HAMILTON
SAVINGS & LOAN ASSOCIATIONWith 3 convenient offices to serve you offers insuredsavings at 4°o and home mortgage loans.
The principal office is at Ellison & Colt Streets, Pater-son w.th branches ot 459 Lafayette Ave., Hawthorneand Union Valley Road in West Milford.
We at Alexander Hamilton wish the ADVOCATEmany more years of continued success.
Executive Vice President
CONGRATULATIONS10th ANNIVERSARY
We at Jerome J. Stanley,Religious Articles, have al-
ways tried to serve our manyfriends and customers among
the priests, nuns, and laity to
the best of our ability. We
know that The Advocate over
the past 10 years has done
likewise. Asa consistant ad-
vertiser we have watched the
paper grow bringing to
the Catholics of North Jerseythe much needed news from
the Catholic point of view.
MR. JEROME J. STANLEY
MOiYIiOE
S l\< S
ml\lt islit* sincere im*m
congratulationanti
Tl»i Id ocnle
itson
10//* lii/tiivrsur\ TO
MONROE SAVINGSAND LOAN ASSOCIATION
7JI Mothin<|lon Si ul Bank S» ,NrwoO Ni • MA 3-7090
808 GOLDEN and ED CAULFIELD are
co-owners of Lanes Inc., an authorizedGoodyear Tire dealer with retail and whole-sale outlets in Jersey City and Red Bank.
In business for 45 years, Lanes is bestknown for its friendly atmosphere and
prompt and courteous service.
Bob is a parishioner of Our Lady of Vis-itation, Paramus, and Ed, Our Lady of Vic-tories, Jersey City. »
Bob and" Ed will be happy to help youselect the safest and most economical tiresto suit your particular driving needs.
LAMES fVf.649 COMMUNIPAW AVE., JERSEY CITY
DE 3-6300
ooocooococ^co=ocoooccoooooococcoc<cccoco3oos
May vve extend our congratulations to The
Advocate staff on this your Tenth Anniver-
sary of service to the clergy and laitv of the
Archdiocese of Newark and Diocese of Pater-
son. And offer our sincere good wishes for
your continued success.
1186 Raymond Blvd.
494 Broad Street
Newark, N. J.
WQ’O^OOOOOOOOOOOCiOeieiOeQfVV-xxiCCOCO^CCOOO'tXWC
May The Next Decade For You.
. .
The Advocate, Be As Fruitful
And Enlightening For The Catholics
Of Northern New Jersey As Your Past.
HUELSENBECK
MEMORIAL IiOMI
11OH So. Orange Avenue
Newark 6, N. J.
Karl \V. Huclsenbcck
Director
JOHN J.
FEENEY SR.
(deceased*. Foun-der of John J.
Feenrv A Sonsin 1920 openedhis first funeralhome at 417
Main St.. Pater-son. and
re-mained there un-til 19.77. when
hr purchasedfrom the Wll-
Ilams Estate the
premises where
the business is
now conductedin Paterson.
IlJAMES A.
FEENEY,
brother of the
founder* bo.been associated
with the firmisincc its found-ins In 1920.
3R
son of the foun-der is marriedto the formerPraay Naab of
Ridgewood and
has four childrenand resides inGlen Rock, lie
attended Paroch-ial schools inPaterson and isa graduate of
the McAllisterSchool of Em-balming. NewYork
■
son of the foun-
der. is married
to the formerHelen Garvey ofPaterson an and
Wayne. He. like
his brother, wasborn in Pater-son and attend-
ed parochialschools there. Heand Mrs Feeneyreside in Haw-
thorne with their
two children. A
veteran of WorldWar If. Mr. Fee
ncy Joined thefirm following
his graduation
from the Mc-Allister School ofEmbalming in
New York.
385 PARK AVE.
PATERSON
MU 4-4396
John J. Feeney & SonsFUNERAL DIRECTORS
'Serving Catholic I'aniilics"4Since 1920
232 FRANKLIN AVE.
RIDGEWOOD
Gl 4-7650
BEST WISHES TO
THE ADVOCATE
on Your Tenth Anniversary
John J. ( arlin. Inc.
!)7 LINCOLN PARK
NEWARK, N. J.
SURETY BONDS and INSURANCE
Mr. Paul Galluccioof PAIR LAWN
ii Manager & Buyer of the
KONNER'SBOYS' t STUDENTS' DEPARTMENT
at
Market at Church St.,Paterson and
Bergen Mall Stores
Mr. Galluccio It proud of hitattociofion with KONNER'S, con.
tidered one of Paterson's finestfamily clothing stores since itsestablishment in 1887. He has con>
tributed greatly to the expansionof his boys departments duringhis eight years association.
The newest oddition has been
a complete lino of clothing for
parochial school students.
He is taking special interest In
the development and success of
this new department and would
welcome any inquiries. A store*
wide sale will be in effect through*out the month of Jonuary at both
KONNER'S stores.
* William Neumann Jr.,is president of TheProvident Institution for
iw— ——Savings in Jersey City,Hudson County's lari:-est mutual savings
vsbank. Incorporated in
«M| IKK), The Provident isoperated, by charier,for the benefit of itsdepositors, and todaypays 4% per year, thehighest dividend rate
in savings bank circlesin New Jersey. It is thefirst and only savings
—— hank in Hudson Countyto pay interest from the day of deposit. Three convenientlylocated offices in Jersey City offer time-saving, one-stop hank-ing service. They are at Washington and York Streets. Ber-gen and Harrison Avenues, and Communipaw and PacificAvenues.
Tlu* Advocate 1051-1961
It's our pleasure to
wish you a. . .
t
Happy Anniversary . . .
And to hove hod the pleasant relationshipwith
your stolf this post year ond wish you
mony moro yeors of success ond happiness.
CREATIVE IDEASI*l ItIJC RELATIONS
34 HAVENWOOD DRIVE
LIVINGSTON, N.J.
We take pleasure in Congratulating
THE ADVOCATEon the occasion of its 10th Anniversary and
we wish to take this opportunity to expressour appreciation to the many clergy, nuns
ond friends who we have gained over the
past mony yoars.
SCANLANl i st:H i L HOMES
781 Newark Pompfon Tpk: 421 12th Ave.
Pompton Plains, N. J. Paterson, N. J.
TE 5 4156 SH 2-6433
HARRY C. ZIMMER,President of the Com-
mercial Trust Com-
pany of New Jersey,has used The Advo-
cate many years to
advertise his bank'sservices.
The Commercial
Trust Company of
New Jersey is a FULL-
SERVICE BANK with11 offices in JerseyCity, Bayonr.e andUnion City. It hasbeen serving the com-
munity since 1899.
Goodwin Adrian
il Owntr of
Adrian’sNorth Jersey's target! family
shoe store locoted at
84 MAIN STREET
in Downtown Paterson
During the patt 32 yean, Adrian'shoi faithfully torvod thoutandi of
women, men ond children with
the finest quality of footwear, hoi
olwoys stressed sensible but fosh-
ionablo styling, perfect comfort
ond accurate fit.
Mr. Adrian cordiolly invites oil
women to take odvantoge of the
exceptional shoe values in Adrian'sSemi-Annual Clearance Sole now
inprogress.
LEO A. CURLEY
is themonager of the
ALEXANDER
HAMILTON HOTEL
55 CHURCH STREET
PATERSON
The hotel offers excel-
lent banquet facilities and
is well known in North
Jersey for the fine foodsserved.
A feature of the hotelis tho Silhouitc Room
which offers brcakfosl,lunch and dinners.
Continenlol Cuisine Is
featured here, why not
stop in some night for din-
ner and cockloils?
BERNIE LACHNICHTis tho pissidsflt of
HORIZONSTRAVEL SERVICE
conveniently locoted in tho
T-Bowl Shopping Center
Hamburg Turnpike, Wayne
Mr. iochnicht. o porishionor of
St. Marys. Pompion lokot. hosmany yoors espertenceIn tho Irovol
busmen ond has orgonnod Cotho.
tic pilgrimages ond tours in furopoond North Amorico.
horizons* ißAvfCsnrviciu^oquippod to hondlo oil of your*"travol noods. tours. C»wi»oi ond ti«k«
ots for oil typos of transportationfor distinction to anywhere from
Hartford to Hongkong,Whon you thoughts lourn to trov«l
Call HORIZONS
OX 4-2555
"where l«r«HO h our ktyn o'*,#
CONGRATULATIONS
AND
BEST WISHES
TO
THE ADVOCATEON THE OCCASION OF ITS
10th ANNIVERSARY
(Jitlord 11. Peiuecken\MUL home
1321 TEANECK ROAD, WEST ENGLEWOOD, N. J.
FRANCIS X. FAHEY, ManagerTE 7-2332
10th ANNIVERSARY »_
CONGRATULATIONSWe are pleased to have been
among the first
Advocate advertisers. We have advertised consistantlyover the past decade and hove found the paper veryuseful in helping our own business to prosper.
We ENGEL BROS, have always endeavored to
render that service most consistant with good business.We take- pride in our relationship, and we thank allthose customers and friends, that have come to know us
thru The ADVOCATE.
MR. JOSEPH ENGEL
President
ENGEL BROS.
MOVING & STORAGE
ELIZABETH, N.J.
VICTOR CAGGIANOii th» president of
NORTH JERSEYBUTCHERS
2234 Hamburg TurnpikeWayne
. Wholetaleri since 1945 this firm
hot supplied prime meats, game,
poultry and frozen foods to Cath*
olic Institutions, Hotels, & Rostov*
rants as well os home freezer
owners.
North Jersey Butchersis one of the largest and best
known wholesale suppliers In the
state and has an excellent repu-
tation for quality and service.
Mr. Caggiono who is also presi*dent of Meyer Bros. Dept. Store,Paterson Home Food Service ond
president of Steinback & Cos.
Home Food Service Asbury Park
A Red Bank, cordially invites oil
home freezer owners to inquireabout his service.
JOHN WEISZ SR.& JOHN WEISZ JR.
of
WEISZ FOODTOWN449 LAKEVIEW AVENUE
CLIFTON, N.J.
porishioners of St. Bren-
dan, & members of ReginaMundi Knights of Colum-
bus.
Serving the people of
the Clifton area with over
40 years experience in the
retail food busines.
Widely known for topquality meals and produceat lowest everyday prices.
WEISZ FOODTOWN wos
the first store in area with
100°. pre-packaged pro-duce.
Liiiiinn
For two generations Zampclla’shas been known as a traditionalgentlemen’s clothing store.
At this time we are proud to an-
nounce the existence of a ladies'
shoppe catering to the casual and
trad'tiomH lady the lady who
loves to be classically dressed can
find her apparel in our little VillageShop.
GJ/umkMAs/IiKI I SOS
254 Newark Ave. Jersey City
James a. McLaughlin
is the proprietor and director of the
McLaughlin funeral home
located at
591 JERSEY AVE., JERSEY CITY
He is assisted in the operation of the Home by his son
james a. Mclaughun, jr.
'A member of the New Jersey Funeral Directors Associ-
ation, the Home has been serving the Community, in
limes of need, for 30 years, with dignity ond courteous
service.
Mi. McLaughlin has been on advertiser In The Advocatesince its origin 10 years ago.
CONGRATULATIONS
THE ADVOCATEon your
10th ANNIVERSARY
■S f— *
r r\ |\ yrv **
f"SERVING BEREAVED
» rvf‘Awfamilies for
over 100 YEARS"
NECKER-SHARPE
rfdnela/SfdontsUN*o« 7 0820
un.oh ;oi jo
525 • 45th STREET
UNION CITY, N.J.
December 28. 1961 T H E A D V O r A T K 27
PULL OUT THIS HANDY ADVOCATE ADVERTISERS GUIDE -FOR ALL YOUR NEEDS!FLORISTS (cont'd)
Hanover Floral Cos.
61 Ridgedale Avenue
Hanover, N.J.
Charles Horneker Florist445 Central AvenueE. Orange, N.J.
Marvel Florist, Inc.
41 BroadwayDenville, N.J. * $
.Rocky's Florist Inc.
200 Main Street
Boonton, N.J.
Soranno Florists
47 Park Place
Morristown, N.J.
Wanaque Florist, Inc.
1082 Ringwood Ave.
Wanaque, N.J.
Washington Florist
565 Broad Street
Newark, N.J.
Wittman's Flower Shop1435 Van Houten Avenue
Clifton, N.J.
FOOD - DAIRY ■ BEVERAGES
Acme Markets
185 Washington Street
Newark 2, N.J.
Beranette Candy Kitchen
Broad St. & Van Houten Ave.
Clifton, N.J.
Beranette Candy KitchenRiverview Drive
Totowa, N. J.
Boiler BeveragesE. Jersey St.
Elizabeth, N.J.
Brookdale Beverages Cos.
Bloomfield, N.J.
Forsf PackingKingston, N.Y.
Gratzels Bakery474 Cedar Lane
Teoneck, N.J.
Monks Bread
Warehom, Mass.
North Jersey Butchers Inc
2234 Hamburg Tpke.Wayne, N.J.
O'Dowd's DairyRoute #46
Pine Brook, N.J.
Packard's
Main & TempleHackensack, N. J.
Tru-Cut Discount Food.
480 Sylvan Avenue
Englewood Cliffs, N. J.
Weisz Foodlown Market449 Lakeview Ave.
Clifton, N. J.
FUNERAL
MONUMENT DEALERS
Albert H. Hopper, Inc
329-341 Ridge Rood
N. Arlington. N. J.
Arlington Monumental Works30 Prospect Place
Arlington, N. J.
George Koch & Sons
48 Temple Avenue
Hackensack, N. J.
Memorial Art Studio
t
301 Ocean Avenue
Jersey City, N. J.
Newark Monument Cos.222 Ridgedale Avenue
Hanover, N. J,
John F. A. McGovern485 Bramjall Avenue
Jersey City, N. J.
Paterson Monument Cos.317 Totowa Avenue
Paterson, N. J.
While Monument Cos.
15 Maybaun Avenue t*
Newark, N. J. -
FUNERAL DIRECTORS
BERGEN COUNTY
Hennessey Funeral Home232 Kipp Avenue
Hasbrouck Heights, N. J.
Trinka Funerol ServiceMaywood Bogota little FerryJohn J. Feeney & Sons232 Franklin Avenue
Ridgewood, N. J,
Clifford H. Peinecke1321 Teoneck Road
W. Englewood. N. J.
Thomas J. Difflly41 Ames Avenue
Rutherford. N J.
ESSEX COUNTY
Frank McGee525 Summer Avenue
Newark, N, J.
Murroy Funeral Serv ice206 Belleville Avenue
Bloomfield, N. J.
Murphy Funeral Home301 Roseville Avenue
Newark, N, J,
Opacity Funeral Home722 Clinton AvenueNewark 8, N. J.
Wozniak Memorial Home320-22 Myrtle Avenue
Irvington, N. J.
Gorny & Gorny303 Main Street
E. Orange. N J.,
FUNERAL DIRECTORS (cont'd) FURNITURE (cont'd)
ESSEX COUNTYL. V. Mullin & Son
976 Broad Street
Newark, N. J.
Peter J. Quinn
320 Belleville Avenue
Bloomfield, N. J.
Gorny & Gorny Mortuary369 Broad Street
Bloomfield, N. J.
Flood Funeral Home
112 S. Munn Avenue
E. Orange. N. J.
Kiernan Funeral Home
101 Union Avenue
Belleville, N. J.
Codey's Funeral Service
69 High StreetOrange, N. J.
Huelsenbeek Memorial Home1108 S. Orange Avenue
Newark 6, N. J.
Codey's Funeral Service
77 Park Street
Montclair, N. J.
Decapua Funeral Home
269 Mf. Prospect Avenue
Newark, N. J.
George Ahr & Son
700 Nye Avenue
Irvington, N. J.
Rezem Funeral Home
579 Grove Street
Irvington, N. J,
Stanton Funeral Home661 Franklin Avenue
Nutley, N. J.
Murphy Memorial Home
102 Fleming Avenue
Newark, N. J.
John F. Murphy480 Sanford Avenue
Newark. N. J.
John J. Quinn Funeral Home
323*329 Pork Avenue
Orange, N. J.
HUDSON COUNTY
William Schlemm, Inc.
200 Hudson Blvd.
Union City, N. J.
Howard J. Brennan
6414 Bcrgenline Avenue
West New York, N. J.
James A. McLaughlin591 Jersey Avenue
Jorsoy City, N. J.
Williom Schlemm, Inc.
539 Bergen Avenue
Jersey City, N. J.
Earl F. Bosworth
311 Willow Avenue
Hoboken, N. J.
Ncckcr-Shorpe Funeral Home
525 45th Street
Union City, N. J.
Rieman Funeral Home
1914 New York Avenue
Union City. N. J.
Leber Funerol Home
20lh Street & Hudson Blvd.Union City, N. J.
MORRIS COUNTY
Berminghom Funeral Home
249 South Main Street
Whorton, N. J.
Scanlon Funerol Homes
781 Nework Pompton Tpk.Pompton Plains, N. J.
PASSAIC COUNTY
Gormtey Funerol Home
154 Washington Place
Possaic, N. J.
Quinlan Funeral Home
27-29 Harding AyenuoClifton, N. J.
Hennessey Funerol Homo
171 Washington Ploce
Passaic. N. J.
Corny & Corny Mortuory519 Marshall Street
Polerson, N. J.
UNION COUNTY
Corny & Corny Mortuary330 Elizabeth Avenue
Elizabeth. N. J.
Mastapeter Funeral Homes
400 Faitoule Avenue
Roselle Park. N. J..
Mastapeter Funerol Homes
317 Amity Street
Elizabeth. N, J.
Miller Bannworth Funeral
1055 East Jersey Street
Elizabeth, N. J.
James F. Caffrey & Son
71 Pennsylvania Avenue
Newark, N J.
FURNITURE
Adrian Funiture
Route z* 10
Morris Ploins, N.J.
Beacon Furniture
596 Bloomfield Avenue
Bloomfield. N. J.
The Berkeley Cos.
114 William Street
Newark, N. J.
E R. Cole
145 Route #4
Paramos, N. J.
Co-op. Furniture Factory42 Orange StreetNewark. N. J,
Hodor844 McCarter Hwy.Newark, N. J.
Hoffman & BoyleRoute -4
N. Hackensack, N. J.
Imperatore Quality Furniture
3604 New York Avenue
Union City, N. J.
Kent BeddingRoute #46Dover, N.J.
McManus Brothers1152 E. Jersey Street
Elizabeth, N. J.
Ronalds Furniture
Teaneck Rd.& Cedar Lane
Teaneck, N. J.
The Spinning Wheel
Route “4
Paramus, N. J.
Stone & Cos.
320 Grove Street
Jersey City, N. J.
The Weseo CompanyRoute *lO
Hanover, N. J.
C. M. Whitney Furniture Cos.
Route *22
Union, N. J.
HEATING & PLUMBING
Efficiency Htg. & Appli. Cos.
555 Tonnele Avenue
Jersey City, N. J.
langfeldt Heating & Vent. Cos.
210 43rd Street
Union City, N. J.
leach Brothers Inc.
286 Madison Avenue
Clifton, N. J.
Masda Corp.355 Frelinghuyseh Avenue
Newark, N. J.
Distributing Cos.
300 Chancellor Ave.
Newark. N. J.
Petroleum Heat & Power Cos.
972 Broad Street
Newark, N. J.
Joseph F. Spangenberger24 Wilson Avenue
Newark, N. J.
HOME & SUPPLY
Allied Craftsman
601 Chestnut Avenue
Teaneck, N. J.
Anderson Construction Cos.
274 Central Avenue
Orange, N. J.
Bonded Builders
Boulevard
E. Paterson, N. J.
Burlington Elevators, Ine.
246 Fulton Street
New York 7, N. Y.
Century Industries Inc.
1406 Stuyvesont Avenue
Union, N. J.
City ladder Cos.
154 Getty Avenue
Paterson, N. J.
Columbia Industries Corp.2460 lemoine Avenue
Fort lee, N. J.
Felix Fox & Sons
952 S. Orange Avenue
Newark, N. J. v
Gates Ladder Cos.
Morket at E. 31st Street
Paterson, N. J.
Hanover Equip!. & Marine Cos.
State Highway *lO
Hanover, N. J.
Kitchen-Ramo664 Outwater lane
Lodi, N. J.
lenart Distributors Inc.412 Central Avenue
E, Orange, N. J.
lightning Electric Service
11-13 Coes Place
Newark 2, N. J.
O'Connor Const. Cos.
70 Sunset Avenue
Newark, N. J,
Parker House
1140 Route *46
Clifton, N. J.
Roofing by Wilkie
Route *46
Denville. N. J.
Siperstein's369 Montgomery St.
Jersey City, N.J.
Scott Kitchens
537 BroadwayBoyonne, N.J.
Seaboard Hydraweld Inc.8 Myrtle Avenue
Passaic, N. J,
Tonke Custom Tops1039 Clinton Avenue
Irvington, N. J.
Turner Fence Cos.
150 State Highway *lO
Hanover, N J,
Vulcan Waterproofing Cos.7 South Harrison StreetE. Orange. N. J,
HOTELS - RESTAURANTS
The Afton
S. Orange Ave. & Hanover Rd.
Florham Park, N. J.
Alexander Hamilton Hotel
55 Church Street
Paterson, N.J.
Aulise's
Bloomfield & Clifton Avenues
Newark, N. J.
The Bavarian Room
703 Elizabeth Avenue
Elizabeth, N. J.
The Brass Horn
Cherry & W. Grand Sts.
Elizabeth. N. J.
Carlton Hotel
24 E. Park St.
Newark, N. J.
Casino De Charlz
120 Union Blvd.
Totowa Boro, N. J.
Caughey's Restaurant
64 Hoboken Road
E. Rutherford, N. J.
Chanticler506 Millburn Avenue
Millburn, N. J.
Copper Hood
1 Park Avenue
Lyndhurst, N. J.
Fitzpatrick Catering Service
Jersey City, N.J.
Frior Tuck Inn
Route -23
Cedar Grove, N. J.
Gilhuly's Restaurant
729 Bth "AvenueNew York, N. Y.
Golden Lantern
1900 E. Edgar Rd.
Linden, N.J.
Horn & Hardhart RestaurantsGarden State Plaza
Paramus. N. J.
Hotel Essex House
Broad Street & Lincoln AvenueNewark, N. J.
Ilvento's925-31 West Side AvenueJersey City, N. J.
Johnny & Margie's Tap HouseRoute -46
Parsippany, N. J.
Kingston Restouran*
1181 Morris Avenue
Union, N. J.
Kohler's Swiss Chalet120 W. Passaic
Rochelle Park, N. J.
Lake View on the Boardwalklake Mohawk
Sparta, N. J.
Lynn Restaurant
624 Westfield Avenue
Elizabeth, N. J.
Maison Billia RestaurantTerrill Road
Scotch Plains, N. J.
Mayfair Forms CaterersWest Orange. N. J.
Pals Cabin
Prospect & Eagle Rock AvenueW. Orange, N. J.
Ped-e-flous Supper Club708 Mountain Blvd.
Watchung, N. J.
Petrullo's
Polifly Rd. & Essex Street
Hackonsack, N. J.
Plaza Hotel
Journal SquareJersey City, N. J.
Rankin Catering Service
928 E. 24th Street
Paterson, N. J.
Robin Hood Inn
1129Volley Rd.Clifton, N. J.
The Rounders RestaurantRoute r l7
Paramus, N. J.
Scordato's Restaurant
20 Hamilton Street
Paterson, N. J.
St. Moritz
Lake Mohawk
Sparta, N.J.
Swiss Chalet
Route = l7
Romsey, N, J.
Thomm's80 Park Avenue
Newark. N. J.
Turtlebrook
Northfield Ave.
West Orange, N J,
Robert Treat Hotel
Pork Place
Newark, N. J,
INSURANCE
Borgos & Borgos Insurance
593 Kearny Avenue
Keorny, N, J.
Joseph M. Byrne Cos.
828 Brood Street
Newark, N. J.
Frank D. Coppiello585 Kearny Avenue
Kearny, N. J,
Carlin Bonds & Insurance
97 Lincoln Park
Newark, N. J.
INSURANCE (cont'd)
Citizens Agency786 Broad Street
Newark, N. J.
Harry Criscoulo
80 Jefferson Street
Newark 5, N. J.
Garden State Title Insur. Cos,
500 Bloomfield Avenue
Montclair, N. J.
Allen E. Kaplan110 Halstead St.
E. Orange. N. J.
Joseph F. MurphyBox 1041
Sparta, N. J.
JEWELERS
Busch & Sons
857 Broad Street
Newark, N. J.
Celeste Jewelers
6 W. So. Orange Avenue
S. Orange, N. J.
S. Marsh & Sons
189 Market St.Newark 2, N. J.
Nelmor Jewelers901 Bergen Avenue
Jersey City, N. J.
Julius Oksenhorn1 94 Market Street
Newark, N. J.
Tappins795 Broad Street
Newark, N. J.
Wiss Jewelers
665 Broad Street
Newark, N. J.
LIQUORS
Chartreuse30 Cooper Street
New York, N. Y.
LUGGAGE
Bal Luggage Shop115 Halsey Street
Newark 2, N. J.
MEDICAL
Acousticon
26 Journal SquareJersey City, N. J.
Hospitalization Eastern StatesHeolth AgencyUnion, N. J.
Jacuzzi Whirlpool Bath1238 Raymond Blvd.
Newark, N. J.
lennon-Peek Surgical Cos., Inc.341 h Avenue
Brooklyn 17, N. Y.
N.Y. Foundling HospitalNew York, N.J.
U. S. Hearing Aid Clinic2165 Morris Avenue
Union. N. J.
Wianer-Meeham3702 Bergenline AvenueUnion City, N.J.
MISCELLANEOUS
Acme Coot Apron Towel Cos.252 Chestnut Street
Keorny, N. J.
The Associated lions Club
Elizabeth. N. J.
William H. Connolly & Cos.14 S. Park Street
Montclair, N. J.
R. T. Davies, Tree Surgeon81 Hillcrest Avenue
Morristown, N. J.
Electro-Stencil Cos.
79 White Beeches Drive
Dumont, N. J.
Essex Art Engraving345 Plane Street
Newark, N. J.
Lillian's Beauty Salon795 BroadwayNework, N. J.
Horry F. Murphy78 Clinton Street
Nework 2, N. J.
Mottia Press
91 Terry St.
Belleville, N.J,
Nework Bindery Inc.
71 Clinton Street
Nework. N. J.
Novello's Beauty Solon50 Journal Square
Jersey City, N. J.
Pork Beauty School125 Halsey Street
Newark, N. J,
Stevenson & Smith Inc.80 Duryee StreetNewark, N. J.
Werlher Displays3438 Hudson Blvd,
Jersey City, N. J.
MOVING & STORAGE
Engel Brothers
Elizabeth, N J.
MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS
Altenburg Piano House1150 E. Jersey Street
Elizabeth, N. J.
MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS
(Continued)The Baldwin Piano Cos.
20 E. 54th Street
New York, N. Y.
Craftsman Plano ShopRoute -10
Morris Plains, N. J.
Griffith Piano Cos.
605 Broad Street
Newark, N. J.
Lord Piano Cos.
650 Eagle Rock Ave.
West Orange, N.J.
Wurlifizer
120 West 42nd St.
New York 36, N.Y.
NATIONAL
Canada Dry BeveragesNew York. N. Y.
Christian Brothers
Fromm & Sichel Inc.
New York, N. Y.
Crestcard Cos.
169 Highland Avenue
Newark, N. J.
Fischer's BakingNew York, N. Y.
Newark Evening News
Newark, N. J.
New York Herald TribuneNew York, N. Y.
New York Journal American
New York, N. Y.
Super Nutrition from France'•
P.O. Box 4940
Miami, Florida
Tunalinks
New York, N. Y.
NURSING HOMES
Dolly Mount Nursing Home
20 Valley Road
Clifton, N. J.
Stony LodgeOssining-on-HudsonNew York, N. Y.
REAL ESTATE
Bayshore Estates
Route #440
Jersey City, N. J.
Baywood on Barnegat BayBrick Township. N. J.
Bel-Aire Homes
Route = 46
Lodi, N. J.
Braemar At WayneWayne, N. J.
Brookwood
Lakewood, N.J.
Country VillageRoute #440
Jersey City, N.J.
Forest lakes
Andover, N. J.
Lake lenapeAndover, N. J.
Lake Panoroma
Sussex Cos. N. J.
lake Success
Sussex County, N.J.
The MacGowan Agency1403 3rd Avonue
Spring Lako, N. J.
New Jersey Reolty Cos.
c/o J. A. Wapshare Cos.744 Broad Stroet
Newark, N. J.
North Arlington HeightsSchuyler Avenue
N. Arlington, N. J.
Post Brook Estates
West Milford, N. J.
Rambling Heights
Rockowoy, N.J.
Rockoway RidgeDover, N. J.
Rolling Ridge ot
Washington TownshipWashington Township, N. J.
Wost Milford Homes
West Milford, N.J.
Windward Palms
171 larch Avenue
Bogota, N. J.
RELIGIOUS *
Blessed Trinity MissionaryRetreat Cenacle
Sterling, N. J.
Brothers of ChorilyOor lady of Charity Novltlote
7720 Doe lane
Philadelphia 18, Pa.
Brothers of the Sacred Heart
Metuehen, N J.
Christian Brothers of Ireland
Rev. Br. E. C. O'Connor
7 I 5 North Avenue
New Rochelle- N. J.
Confraternity of the
Precious Blood
5300 Fort Hamilton Pkwy.Brooklyn 19, N. Y,
Franciscon Family Circle
125 W 31 st Street
New York, N. Y,
Franciscan FathersSt. Bemadme's MonosteryBox 177
Hollidaysburg, Pa.
Franciscan Missionary Union
135 W. 31st Street
New York 1, N. Y.
RELIGIOUS (cont'd)
Georgian Court CollegeLakewood, N. J.
Graymoor's Annuity Plan
Graymoor, N.Y.
St. Boniface Auditorium"His Mother's Promise"
Main & Slater Streets
Paterson, N.J.
Immaculata Players Guild
Munn St. & N. Fullerton Ave.
Montclair, N. J.
Maryknoll Fathers
121 E. 39th St.
New York 16, N. Y.
The Pallottine Fathers
309 N. Poca St.
Baltimore 1, Md.
The Passion Play530 35th Street
Union City, N. J.
Queen of Peace Retreat HouseSt. Paul's AbbeyNewton, N. J.
Rev. Father Ralph, S.V.D.
Catholic Universities316 N. Michigan Avenue
Chicago, 111.
St. Boniface Residence
254 First Street
Jersey City, N. J.
St. Joseph's Villa
Blairsden
Peapack, N. J,
The Serra Club of the Oranges178 Charlton Avenue
S. Orange, N. J.
Sisters of the Good Shepherd226 Sussex Avenue
Morristown, N. J.
Sisters of the Sorrowful Mother50 Morris Avenue
Denville, N. J.
Society of the Divine WordGirard, Pa.
The Trinitarian Fathers
Vocation Director •Box 5742
Baltimore. Md.
Veronfea's Veil Theatre
14th St. & Central AvenueUnion City, N. J.
Via Dolorosa AuditoriumBlvd. at 23rd St.
Bayonne, N. J.
Villa Ferrolti
St. Peter's Convent
25 St. John's Place
Torrinlon, Conn.
RELIGIOUS GOODS
Alba House
Society of St. Paul
Staten Istond, N. Y.
Benxinger Bros. Inc.
7 E. 51 si St.
New York 22, N. Y.
The Book Shelf
87 W. Bth St.
Bayonne, N. J.
Cath-Art Products Cos., Inc.128 S. Columbus Avenue
Mount Vernon, N. Y.
John J. Crawley Cos., Inc.370 7th Avenue
New York 1. N. Y.
Tho Credo Shop64 Speedwell Avenue
Morristown, N. J.
Duffy & Quinn Inc.
45 E. 51st St.
New York 22, N. Y.
Ferrl Bros. Inc.
S 124Route *l7
Poromus, N. J,
Higgins CraftedP. O. Box 142
Roselle, N. J.
L & M Picture Fromet272 N. Broad St.
Elirobeth, N, J.
Mary Anne Shop446 West Side Avenue
Jersey City, N. J.
Madonna Gift Shop99 Market Street
Paterson. N.J.
Edward O Toole Cos,, Inc.19 Park Place
New York 7, N. Y.
Plainfield Religious Goods411 Pork Avenue
Plainfield, N. J,
J B Redly57 Halsey Street
Newark, N. J,
The Rotor Cos.
520 Fifth Avenue
New York 36, N. Y,
Philip f. Sikoro & Sons180 Market St \,
PossoiC, N. J.
The Sodolity Shop235 Old Bergen Rd.
Jersey City, N. J.
Jerome J. Stanley116 Washington St.
Newark, N. J.
U T. f. T.
26 Journal Sq-
Jersey City, N. J.
Victoria Guild725 West Side Avenue
Je'sey City, N. J.
RESORTS
Bertrand Island
Lake Hopatcong, N. J.
The Flanders Hotel
St. James PI.
Atlantic City, N. J.
Palm Beach Plaza Hotel
Palm Beach, Florida
RUGS - FLOOR COVERINGS
Brehms Rug Cleaning333 North Broad St.
Elizabeth, N. J.
Dean Floor Covering*1036 Bergen St.
Newark, N. J.
Duffy'*114 Logan Avenue
Jersey City, N.J.
Freedman Bros.
385 Springfield Avenue
Newark, N. J.
Hannon'*
380 Broad St.
Newark, N. J.
Master Floor*
Route #4Fair lawn, N.J.
SHOE STORES
Adrian'*
84 Main Street
Paterson, N.J.
Amento'* Footwear
Store #ll
Preaknes* Shopping Center
Wayne, N.J.
Edward's Shoe Center
501 Bloomfield Avenue
Montclair, N.J.
Laufer Bros. Shoe Fitter*
468 Bloomfield Avenue
•Caldwell, N.J.
Salata Shoe Store **
16 BroadwayDenville, NJ.
Scientific Shoe Fitter*
501 Bloomfield Avenue
Montclair, N.J.
Stenchever's
215 Main Street
Paterson, N.J.
SPORTING GOODS
AAA Sports Centre
553 BroadwayBayonne, N.J.
Denville Boat & Sport CenterRoute #46
Denville, N.J.
TRAVEL
American Express Cos.
New York, N.Y.
Air France
683 Fifth Avenue
New York 22, N.Y.
Joseph M. Byrne & Cos.
828 Broad St.
Newark, N.J.
Catholic Travel lansealr1026 17»h St. N.W.
Washington, D.C.
Catholic Travel League1841 BroadwayNew York 23, N.Y.
Catholic Travel Office
Dupont Circle Bldg.Washington 6. D.C.
Cunard line
25 BroadwayNew York, N.Y.
Fatima Travel
Washington, N.J.
Ist Soturdoy, Club Pilgrimage*7005 Polk Street
Cuttenburg, N.J.
Fugozy Trovel Bureau, Inc.
351 Avenue of the America*
New York 14. N.Y.
Honna'Mayo Trovel Service9 Clinton St.
Newark, N.J.
Holland American line*29 BroadwayNew York 6. N.Y.
Horizons Trovel Service
T Bowl Shopping CenterWoyne, NJ.
Iberia Airlines518 sth Avenue
New York 36, N.Y.
International Trovel Service245 Market Street
Poterton, NJ.
Irish Airlines
572 Fifth Avenue
New York City, N.Y.
Irish Bureau326 W. 48th St.
New York, N.Y.
Krueger Travel
6507 Bergenline Ave.
West New York, NJ,
Pan American
New York, N.Y.
*wis* Air
New Yorx, N Y,
TWA Airlines
380 Madison Avenue
New York, N.Y.
JTILITIIS
P S. Coordinated Troniport80 Park Ploce
Newark, N.J.
Public Service Electric & Gas
Company80 Pork Ploce Newark, NJ.
28 THE ADVOCATE December 28, 1961
THE ADVOCATE STAFFIN BEHALF OF ITS
This tenth anniversary issue of THE
ADVOCATE affords an excellent opportun-
ity to bring to the attention of all, those whohave identified themselves with our North
Jersey Catholic newspaper as advertisers. ~
We wish to thank them for this supportand for recognizing THE ADVOCATE as a
reliable medium for furthering their busi-
ness interests.
URGES YOUR SUPPORT(ANY ADVERTISERS
As an acknowledgment of this valu-able patronage, we recommend to the pa-per's some 120,000 subscribing familiesreference to this handy advertisers' guidefor their purchases.
i
(J2r-
Executive Director
The Advocate
PULL OUT THIS HANDY ADVOCATE ADVERTISERS GUIDE - FOR ALL YOUR NEEDS!APPLIANCE
Efficiency Heating & Appl. Cos.555 Tonneile Ave.
Jersey City, N.J.
Gem Stores
226 Springfield Ave.
- Newark, N.J.
automotive
A C Chevrolet3085 Hudson Blvd.Jersey City, N.J.
Ayer's Chevrolet OldsmobileRoute #46 ,
Dover, N.J.
Banda Distributors Inc.209 Parkhurst St.
Newark, N.J.
Bauer & Kieran Inc.490 Main Street
E. Orange, N.J.
Bison Motor SalesRoute #46
Rockaway, N.J.
i Brogan Cadillac
1065 Market Street
Paterson, N.J.
Circle Brake Service16 Route #46
Clifton, N.J.
Crown Rambler257 Elizabeth Ave.
Newark, N.J.
Cycle Golf Service990 Newark Avenue
Jersey City, N.J.
Dale and Rankin Inc.Route #lO
Hanover, N.J.
Dorns Auto Sales555 Summerset StreetNorth Plainfield, N.J.
Feliciano Studebaker166 Goffle Road
Hawthorne, N.J.
Fuller Motor Cos.
3508 Hudson Blvd.Union City, N.J.
Konners ChevroletRoute #46
Pine Brook. N.J.
little Car
Route #46
Pine Brook. N.J.
lane's Inc.
649 Communipaw Avenue
Jersey City, N.J.
lloyd Buick
300 St. Georges Ave.
linden, N.J.
Murphy Bros. Motor Sales501-511 N. Broad St.Elizabeth, N.J.
Malcolm (Conner Chevrolet473 Bloomfield Ave.
Caldwell, N.J.
Maple Buick Inc.9-17 5. Orange AvenueS. Orange, N.J.
Mico Motors
60 Market Street
Paterson, N.J.
Ed Muller Motors1284 Mcßride Ave.
little Falls, N.J,
North Essex Buick Cos.
401 Bloomfield Avenue
Bloomfield. N.J.
Orange Troiler Rental ServiceRoute #23
Wayne, N J.
Pace Motors
47 Central Avenue
E. Orange, N.J.
Paul's Motor Sales
Goffle Rood & Lafayette Ave.
Hawthorne, N J.
Puriton Plymouth Valiant666 Market Street
Paterson, N.J.
AUTOMOTIVE (ton^d)
Joyce Oldsmobile171 Glen Ridge Avenue
Montcloir, N.J.
Rezio Motor*
514 River Drive
Garfield, N.J.
Rambler CityRoute --46
little Falls, N.J.
Richert Pontiac
500 Lexington Avenue
Clifton, N.J.
Ross Motor*
516 Union fllvd.
Tolowa Boro, N.J.
Taylor Motor Sale* Inc,
148 sth Avenue
Pater*on, N.'
Trophy Pontiac •*
988 BroodwoyBayonne, N.J.
Word Ford
239 Central Avenue
Nework. N.J.
We»t Caldwell Auto Mart
1071 Bloomfield Avenue
We»t Caldwell, N.J.
Winfield Motor*
1613 Hudson Blvd.
Jer*ey City, N. J.
BUILDING SUPPLIES
* CONTRACTORS
Addressograph Multigroph Cos.
1060 Broad Street
Newark 2, N.J.
Allen Electric Cos., Inc.42 Park Avenue
Paterson, N.J.
Badaracco Bros. & Cos.
401*403 Washington StreetHoboken, N.J.
Fred D. Baumann
1324 Stuyvesant Ave.
Union, N.J.
Beach Electric Cos., Inc.
18 Springdale AvenueE. Orange, N.J.
Bergen Iron & Engineering Cos.Route *l7
Carlstadt. N.J.
Frank W. Bogerl Builder*324 Railroad Avenue
Hackensack. N.J.
Boulevord Fuel Oil Cos.58 First Avenue
Poterson, N.J.
Efficiency Heating555 Tonnelle Ave.
Jersey City, N. J.
Frank Briscoe Cos., Inc,Newark, N.J.
Fred J. Brolherton, Inc.
185 Allonlic Street
Hackentock. N J.
Joseph H. Browne
278 Woyne Street
Jersey City, N.J.
Busch Brothers Inc.
101 W. Palisades Avenue
Englewood. N.J,
Condeliere Construction Cos.
70 Chestnut Ridge Rood
Montvale. N.J,
CensullO’Burke Const. Cos.Secaucus, N. J.
Ceramt Const. Contractors
148 little Street
Belleville, N. J
City & Slate Maintenance Cos.674 Bergen Street
Nework, N.J.
Angelo Colao & Sons127 Pine Street
Cldfside Pork. N J.
John H. Cooney Inc--21 0*212 North 4th StreetHarrison, N.J,
BUILDING SUPPLY
* CONTRACTORS (cont'd)
A. L. Davis Inc.
44 Duryee StreetNewark, N.J.
George l. Dennis Cos., Inc.270 S. 20th Street
Newark 3, N.J.
Designed For Living, Inc.
Route #lO
Hanover, N. J.
Dilley-Flannery Inc.790 Broad StreetNewark, N.J.
Paul Dunkelman567 E. 19th StreetPaterson, N.J.
Dykes lumber Cos.137 W. 24th Street
New York 11, N.Y.
Federal Scaffolding & Shoring721 Madison Street
Hoboken. N.J.
Clement Ferdinand Cos.
Clifton, N.J.
Fiore Bros., Inc.
15 Vose Avenue
s.\Oronge, N.J.
General ContractorsHollywood Avenue
Hillside. N.J.
Michoel J. Harris Inc.
645 New Point Rood
Elizobeth, N.J.
Philip J. Healey Inc.
11 Pork PI.
New York 7, N.Y.
Edword W. Hiemer & Cos.141 Wabash Avenue
Clifton, N.J.
Hudson Structural Iron WorksInc.
Grand & HorfTion Street
Jersey City, N.J.
B. Kotchen Iron Works Inc.148 Shaw Avenue
Newark 12. N.J.
Poul C. Kessler Inc.
16 Glen Road
Verona. N.J.
Krueger Metal ProductsGreen BoyWisconsin
H. louzon Furniture Cos.
1324 Teoneck Rd.
West Englewood, N. J.
leach Brothers Inc.
286 Madison Avenue
Clifton. N.J.
Corl lindomann Cos.
80 Park Avenue
Hoboken. N.J.
Mohony Troost
790 Bloomfield Ave.
Clifton, N.J.
Metropolitan Maintenance Cos.
Adams Street
Hoboken, N.J.
Minnemo Builders16-51 Pormelle AvenueFoir lawn, N.J.
McHugh Inc.56 James StreetMontclair, N.J.
Frank A, Mcßride Cos.
75 Spring Street
Paterson. N.J.
Thomas J. Nolan Cos.
210 Madison Street
Passaic, N.J.
H. f. Nonemoker, Inc,12 Oakland Rd.Maplewood. N.J.
O'Connor Construction Cos.70 Summerset Avenue
Newark, N.J.
Charles F. Reilly Cos., Inc.
2)2 Palisade Avenue
Jersey City, N.J.
BUILDING SUPPLY
* CONTRACTORS (con'td)
Hubert T. Richardson Cos.
688 Van Houten Avenue
Clifton, NJ.
Romagnino Construction Cos.289 Gorge Road
Cliffside Park, N.J.
Stainless Steel Fabricators Inc.
301 Mt. Pleasant Ave.
Newark 4, N.J.
Standard Wood Products
Bernard H. Stenike, Inc.
100 Grand Avenue
Englewood, N.J.
Sipersteins369 Montgomery St.
Jersey City, N.J.
Tower Construction Cos.
Princeton,New Jersey
Visbeon Construction Cos.
555 Goffle Road
Ridgewood, NJ.
Fred Wendel, Inc.
Sunflower Ave. 4 Route 17
Paromus, N.J.
Edward J. White Cos.
351 BroadwayNewark 4/N.J.
J. C. While Cos., Inc.
198 Fairmont Avenue
Jersey City, N.J.
E. J. Wohrle Inc.
15 Bergen Blvd.
Fairview, N.J.
Robert Young & Son
25 Grafton Avenue
Newark 4, N.J.
CAMERA SHOPS
l. Kaltman and Sons Inc.287 Washington Street
Nework, N.J.
LorsfamThomas Studios856 Broad Street
Newark, N.J.
Midtown Camera1187 Raymond Blvd.
Newark, N.J.
Quicks Photo ServiceP.O. Bo* 145
Freeport, N.Y.
Schaeffer Camera
89 Halsey Street
Newark, N.J.
Toms Film ServiceBo* 111
Summit, N.J.
CHARITY
Com. Counselling Service Inc.384 Franklin Avenue
Nutley, N.J.
Near East Missions
480 Lexington AvenueNew York 17. N.Y.
Niewenhous langon Inc.740 Hemlock Drive
Orodell, N.J.
CLOTHING
Amlicke's67 Lexington Avenue
Passoic, N.J.
Browning Fifth Avenue
Brood Street
Nework, N.J.
Canadian Furs & FashionsBrood Street
Nework. N.J.
Cosual ShopGarden State Plata
Paromus, N.J.
Coal Fair
850 Frelinghysen Avenue
Newark, N.J.
Cornell'sGarden State Plata
Paromus, N.J,
CLOTHING (cont'd)
Cotton Cobin
167 Ferry Street
Newark 5, NJ.
Crawford Clothe*158 Market StreetNewark, N.J.
Janet Shop*115 Halsey Street
Newark, NJ.
Jodins of Chatham215 Main Street
Chatham, NJ.
lew* Youth Center
506 BroadwayBayonne, NJ.
lobel'i Youth CenterW. New York, NJ.
Ea*t Paterjon, NJ.Bergen Moll, NJ.
Hackemack, NJ,
Morristown, NJ.
The Marian Shop*616 Stuyvesant AvenueIrvington 11, NJ.
Manzi'*
'404 S. Orange Ave.
Newark, NJ.
Modern Hatter*
313 3rd Street
Jer*ey City, NJ.
Nello'* Hi* & Her* leotherwor535A Weit Side AvenueJersey City, NJ.
Newark Slip Cos.
411 High St.
Newark, N.J.
Peter Anthony ltd,1978 Springfield Avenue
Maplewood, N.J.
Roger* Peel Cos.sth Avenue at 41»t Street*New York, N.Y.
Riki of California313 Jackson Avenue
Jertey City 5, NJ.
Rosemary'* Kiddydashery110 Ellison St.
Paterson, N.J.
Sax Youth Center
33-35 Broad Street
Bloomfield, NJ.
Robert Emmett Tirrell Inc.89 Chamber* St.
New York 7, N.Y.
Whiling & Cos.
561 Broad Streeet
Newark, NJ.
The Custom Gentleman1055 Highwoy 46
Clifton, N.J,
The Women's Shop236 Harrison Ave.
Harrison, NJ.
Zampelloi254 Newark Ave.
Jersey City, NJ.
CURTAINS * DRAPERIES
Calico Corner*
Route fflO
Honover, N J.
DEPARTMENT STORE
Bamberger's.Morket Street
Newark. NJ.
(Conner's
Morket at Church St.
Paterson, NJ.
liptons Dep t Store
SO Broad Street
Bloomfield, N.J,
Newberry'*'Bergen Moll
Paromus, NJ.
DRUG STORES
Bay Drug Company219 Franklin Avenue
Nutley. NJ.
DRUG STORES (cont'd)
Central Pharmacy624 Central Avenue
Westfield, NJ.
Consumer Vitamins
713 S. 14th Street
Newark, NJ.
Ford's Drug Store109 Main Street
Orange, NJ.
Liss Drug Store
51 Journal SquareJersey City, NJ.
Sam & Georgo Mortorana
Liss Pharmacy794 Mt. Prospect Avenue
Newark, NJ.
Valenti's Pharmacy735 West Side Avenue
Jersey City, L.l.
CLEANERS * LAUNDRIES
Duffy's Rug CleaningJersey City, NJ.
Economat
195 Main Street
Orange, N.J.
Union Imperial LaundryNewark, NJ.
Norge Dry Cleaning Village510 Park Avenue
Scotch Plains, NJ.
EDUCATION
Academy of St. Elizabeth
Convent,New Jersey
Caldwell College for Women
Caldwell, N.J.
Catholic Film DirectorySalem WayYonkers, N.Y.
College of St. Elizabeth
Convent Station
New Jersey
Don Bosco Diagnostic Center
Don Bosco High School
Romsey, N.J.
East. School for Physicians Aid85 Fifth Ave.
New York, N.Y.
Hudson County Reading Clinic
3900 New York AvenueUnion City, N.J.
Loyola School
Pork Avenue at 83rd St.New York 28, N.Y.
Mount St. Dominic AcademyCaldwell, N.J,
Park Beauty School125 Halsey St.
Nework, N.J.
St. Anne's SpeechCorrection Center
Fair Lawn, N.J.
St. John's University96 Schormerhorn St.
Brooklyn 1, N.Y.
St. Peter's College2641 Boulevard
Jersey City 6. N.J.
School of Business Machines790 Broad Street
Newark, N.J.
Seton Hall PrepSouth Orange, N.J.
Seton Hall UniversitySouth Orange, N.J.
Nancy Taylor Sec'y School
55 W, 42nd Street
New York 36, N.Y.
Teterboro School of
Aeronautics
Teterboro AirportTeterboro. NJ.
Speeches TutoringHorry W. Pascoe
17 Fairview Avenue
S. Orange, N.J.
EDUCATION (cont'd)
Y. E. S. Books
6 Railroad WayLarchmont, N.Y.
ENTERTAINMENT
Adams Theatre
Branford Place
Newark 2, N.J.
Claridge Theatre492 Bloomfield Avenue
Montclair, N.J.
Central Theatre19 Central Avenue
Passaic, N.J.
Club St. LeoMarket Street
E. Paterson, N.J.
Garden Theatre204 Market Street
Paterson, N.J.
Liberty Theatre1121 Elizabeth Ave.
Elizabeth, N.J.
Lincoln Theatre
518 32nd StreetUnion City, N.J.
Lowe's Theatre
Broadway & 45th Street
Mazdabrook Swim & Golf ClubTroy Rood
Parsippany, N.J.
New Blvd. Pool
Box 191
Bayonne, N.J.
New York GladiotorsRoute #46
Totowa, N.J.
Olympic Pork
Irvington, N.J.
Pinewood Country ClubOld Mill Road
Chester, N.J.
Ronnie Ownes
621 Valley Rood
Upper Montclair, N.J.
Rilz Thoolre
1148 E. Jersey Street
Elizabeth, N.J.
Somerville Drive-In TheatreRoute *22
Somerville, N.J.
State Theatre
Journal SquareJersey City, N.J.
U.S. TheatreMain Street
Paterson, N.J.
Veronica's Veil Theatre14th Street & Central Ave.Union City, N.J.
Wild West City.Route #206 North
Neteong, N.J.
FINANCIAL
Alexonder Hamilton
Savings & Loan Assoc.
1 Colt Street
Paterson, N.J.
Arrow Savings & loon Assoc.120 S. Orange Ave.
Nework, N.J.
Broadway Bank & Trust Cos.
Broadway & W. BroadwayPaterson, N.J,
Carteret Savings & loon Assoc.866 Broad Street
Newark, N.J.
Commercial Trust Cos. of N.J,15 Exchange Place
Jersey City, N.J.
Emigrant Industrial SavingsBank
51 Chombers Street
New York, N.Y.
Equity Savings & loon Assoc.583 Kearny Avenue
Keorny, N.J.
FINANCIAL (corn'd)
Fidelity Union Truit Cos.Board Street
Newark 2. NJ.
First National Bankond Trust Cos.
Keorny Ave., Kearny, N.J.
Ist Not'l Bank of Jersey City1 Exchange Place
Jersey City, N.J.
Ist Not'l Bonk of Passaic Cnty,Paterson, N.J.
Hackensack Mutual Savings& loan
State & Salem St.Hackensack, N.J.
Hoyes Savings & loan Assoc.955 Broad Street
Nework, NJ.
Howard Sovings Institution768 Broad Street
Newark, NJ.
Hudson County Notional Bonk
Jersey City, N.J.
Irving Sovings & loan Aseoc126 Market Street
Polerson. N.J.
Midlown Savings & loan
Association
1030 Broad StreetNework. NJ.
Mohowk Savings & loon
Association
40 Commerce St.Newark, NJ.
Monarch Federal Sovings249 Kearny Avenue
Keorny, NJ.
Monroe Sovings & loan Assoc221 Washington StreetNewark. NJ.
Nationol Stole Bank ofNewark
Broad Street
Newark. NJ.
North Jersey Savings & loanAssociation
625 Main Ave.
Possalc, N. J.
Nutley Savings & loon Assoc244 Chestnut Street
Nutley, NJ.
Orange Sovings BankMoin ond Day Streets
Orange, NJ.
Oriionl Savings & loan Assoc
Moin & Berry Streets
Hackensock, NJ.
Pomrapo S. & l. Assoc.900 Broadway #
Bayonne, N.J.
Provident Institution foe
SavingsWashington & York Street*
Jersey City, NJ.
Trust Cos. of New JerseyJournal SquareJersey City, NJ.
United Savings & loon Assoc136 Market Street
Paterson, N. J.
FIOAISTS
Bosland's Flower Shop1600 Rotier Road
Wayne, NJ,
Charles the Florist7 Park Avenue
Madison, NJ,
Dutch Mill Flower Shop210 Moin Street
Butler, NJ.
Flowers by Douglas317 Ridge Road
N, Arlington, NJ,
Carden Stole Florist947 Newark Ave,Eliiabeth, N. J.
HANDY ADVOCATE ADVERTISERS GUIDE CONTINUED ON PRECEDING PAGE