the advocate - may 24, 1958 - core

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Seton Hall University eRepository @ Seton Hall e Catholic Advocate Archives and Special Collections 5-24-1958 e Advocate - May 24, 1958 Catholic Church Follow this and additional works at: hps://scholarship.shu.edu/catholic-advocate Part of the Catholic Studies Commons , and the Missions and World Christianity Commons Recommended Citation Catholic Church, "e Advocate - May 24, 1958" (1958). e Catholic Advocate. 1. hps://scholarship.shu.edu/catholic-advocate/1

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The Advocate>nu«! p,

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•"**•"•*Nri'.rk ,*n.'j. Official Pubiication^fth(rAjrchdioceBe,,,,

ofNewark N J . '°:ZuJZ and «f the Diocese of PaWn N j

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VOL. 7, NO. 21SATURDAY, MAY 24,1958 PRICE: TEN CENTS

Televiewers Look On

Woman Is Apparently Cured

During Fatima CelebrationsFATIMA, Portugal (NC)—A

woman was apparently cured

of paralysis at the shrine ofOur Lady of Fatima as tele-vision viewers throughout Por-

tugal looked on.

The incident took place dur-

ing the celebration of the 41st

anniversary of the Blessed Vir-

gin’s first apparition here, at-tended by a throng estimated

at 500,000.

AT THE SPECIAL blessingafter the Mass for the sick, Ma-ria Augusta Borges, 30, whohad been brought here on a

stretcher from a Coimbra hos-

pital, rose from the stretcher

and was able to walk about.The apparent cure took place

just below the new 15-footstatue of Our Lady of Fatima

carved by California-born Rev.Thomas McGlynn, O.P. Unveil-

ing of the statue was the highpoint of the anniversary cele-brations.

The Mass for the Sick wasoffered in the great*op«i«iifrsanctuary in front of the Fat-ima basilica by AuxiliaryBishop Joao Pereira Venancioof Leiria, with about 800 sickand crippled people drawn up in

rows in a reserved space atthe foot of church steps.At the conclusion of the Mass,visiting Bishops carried mon-

strances with the Blessed Sac-

rament to each sick person,giving an individual blessing.

AS BISHOP Thomas M. Foxof Wilcannia-Forbes, Austra-

lia, gave the blessing to Miss

Borges, she leaped from her

stretcher and started to walk.The action was seen dearlyover the Portuguese television

network, which was transmit-

ting the Fatima ceremonies forthe first time.

It was learned afterward

that Miss Borges had been a

patient at the hospital in Co-

imbra for 5Vi years, sufferingparalysis of the legs and left

arm. She was said to be un-

able to straighten her back,and had been having increas-

ing difficulty in speaking. On

returning from the Blessing of

the Sick, she could stand erect,

walk alone and talk normally.

Her case is being studied bymedical authorities.

THE APPARENT cure of the

paralytic took place shortlyafter the unveiling of the tow-ering white marble statue of

Our Lady.At the ceremony, Bishop Pe-

reira Venancio expressed

tiNMk*.4n Um name of Portu-gal to the Americans who un-

derwrote the cost of the statue.He predicted that "Mary will

triumph over the world.”

FATIMA STATUE DEDICATED: This 15-ton statue of Our Lady of Fatima, donatedby American Catholics and carved by a U.S. Dominican Priest, was unveiled at Fati-ma before thousands of pilgrims. The ceremony took place in front of the Basilicaof Our Lady of Fatima in connection with the 41st anniversary of the Marian appari-tions. The original Fatima statue is shown at left.

Car Dealers Act

Ask Enforcement

Of Sunday LawBARRE, Vt. (NC) - The Wash-

ington County Auto Dealers’ As-sociation has demanded the en-

forcement of a law which would

prohibit the sale of cars in this

area from midnight Saturday un-

til Monday morning.A resolution adopted at a meet-j

lng here said: “Any dealer soli-1citing or keeping open on Sun-

days will be subjected to a com-

plaint by the Washington CountyAuto Dealers’ Association, and

duly prosecuted by the state’s at

torney.”State’s Attorney W. Edson Mc-

Kee is reported to have advised

the dealers that - he would prose-

cute any violators upon receiptof complaints.

On the Inside. . .

ARE PARENTS making a mess of rearing their chil-

dren? Father Thomas discusses the problemon • • Page 9

NO MORE QUONSET HUTS for orphans at St. Jo-

sephs Home. For story on their new home,see Page 11

MEMORIAL DAY, how did it start, what is its mean-

ing? See the editorial on p a g e r

COMMUNISM CAN be overcome. Read how one priestturned the trick on pa g e 6

School Heads UrgeLay RepresentationCLEVELAND (RNS) - Repre-

sentation of laymen on diocesan

school boards was recommended

by Ohio Catholic school superin-tendents at a meeting here.

They said that Catholic laymenneed to be acquainted with the

problems of Catholic schools as

many state education groupshave laymen among their mem-

berships.

Senate Votes

ImmunityFor CharitiesTRENTON Without de-

bate and by a 17-0 vote, theNew Jersey State Senate

adopted a bill which would

grant immunity from negli-gence suits to non-profit charita-ble and religious institutions.

The bill, which is retroactiveto Jan. 1, 1956, has been sent tothe Assembly for action. It wasintroduced by State Sen. FrankS. Farley of Atlantic in view ofa recent Supreme Court decisionthat in the absence of explicitlegislation, the old common-lawprinciple of imfnunity for suchinstitutions was no longer valid.

Farley s bill, while retroactive,would not apply to the three cas-

es which were thus decided by ithe court. One of the cases in-volved St. Luke's Church, Hoho-'kus.

THE BILL STATES that “nonon-profit corporation, society or

association organization exclusive-!ly for religious, charitable or hos-pital purposes shall be liable to

respoiyi in damages to any per-1son who shall suffer damage!from the negligence of any agentor servant” of the institution in-volved.

The immunity principle upsetby the Supreme Court in a seriesof 5-3 tiotes was first establishedin England more than 100 years

ago and upheld in New Jerseyfor the first time in 1925.

PAPAL BLESSING: A baby is lifted above the crowdto receive a blessing from Pope Pius XII during a

mass audience in St. Peter's Basilica.

Senate Passes Sunday Bill;

Constitutionality QuestionedTRENTON Even while the bill to prohibit sales of

certain items on Sunday wends its way through legislativechannels, serious questions as to its constitutionality havearisen. ,

Only hinted at before, the constitutional question came

out into the open this week when

the Senate, by a 13-0 vote, passedthe bill as amended by Sen.

Frank S. Farley of Atlantic.

FARLEY’S amendment stipu-lates that should any section of

the bill be found unconstitutional,then the entire bill will become

invalid. The obvious interpreta-tion is that Farley thinks the bill

may be partly unconstitutional

because it was also amended in

the Senate to exempt Ocean, At-lantic and Cape May Counties.

If the exemptions should be

ruled unconstitutional and the

bill had stood as originallyadopted by the Assembly, then

the ban against Sunday selling1 might also have applied to the

I shore counties.

| The amended bill has now gone

back to the Assembly. Should the

| Assembly adopt the measure,

there is some question as to

whether Gov. Meyner would signit although he has not takena stand on the Sunday sales is-

sue. However, Meyner has statedthat he would veto any bill whichhe did not think could be upheldin court.

Among those thinking the bill

may be unconstitutional is Sen-ate Minority Leader John A.Waddington of Salem. He said

adoption of the Farley amend-

ment is an admission by the

Republican majority that the billis unconstitutional

Waddington is opposed to Sun-

day sales legislation on religiousgrounds, claiming it is an in-

fringement on religious freedom.He also said the bill now underconsideration is discriminatory Inthat it applies only to a handful

of items.

i ANOTHER WHO fears that the

bill may be unconstitutional is

Assemblyman J. Edward Crabiel

of Middlesex. Crabiel, oneof five

Assemblymen who originally pro-

posed the measure, said the Sen-

ate amendment exempting the

shore counties "ruins" the bill.

However, he predicted that the

Assembly would pass the bill as

amended.

Also foreseeing the possibil-ity that the measure would

eventually prove unconstitu-tional was Sen. Charles W.

Sandman Jr. of Cape May. He

said the bill is "an unwarrant-

ed use of the stale's policepowers.” Both he and Wad-

dinglon, along with Farley and

several others abstained in the

voting.The bill would prohibit the sale

of clothing, furniture, appliancesand building materials. It is not

as far-reaching as the currentban on Sunday selling, a banwhich has been ruled unenforce-able by the courts because itcontains no penalty provisionfor violation.

LourdesRally in Paterson May 30PATERSON The annual Marian

Youth Rally of the Diocese of Patersonhas been dedicated to the Centenary of

Lourdes by Bishop James A. McNultyand will be held May 30 at Hinchcliffe

Stadium.

IN REQUESTING that Lourdes be

the theme of the colorful affair, the

Bishop referred to the words of PopePius XII: “(it is Our wish that) jubileecelebrations be held not only at Lourdes

near the venerated image of the Immac-

ulate Virgin, but also wherever our moat

beloved heavenly Mother is honored."

Invited to lake part in the tribute

will be all seventh ana eighth gradestudents from parochial schools in the

Diocese, Boy pnd Girl Scouts end all

teenagers. The program will begin at 4p.m. and will be climaxed by the cele-bration of Solemn High Mass by Msgr.Edward J. Scully, diocesan director ofvocations. '

THE PROGRAM will be precededby a musical demonstration rendered bythe cadets of Our Lady of LourdesChurch. Paterson. There will follow theprocession of parish queens, chosen forMary-like qualities, seminarians, clergyand dignitaries of the Diocese, all march-ing with lighted candles in the mode ofmarch at the Loonies Shnne iia.lt A»will join in singing the Lourdes hymn

Asa highlight of the afternoon, Lor-raine Coco of Mt. Carmel, Passaic, newly-chosen diocesan queen, will crown the

statue of Our Lady at the 28foot shnne

bong prepared for the event At the

same time, the more than 80 parish and

district queens will place their Lourdes

candles at the shrine

After the ceremony at the shrine,Miss Coco will present a bouquet of

prayers and spiritual offerings to BishopMcNulty from the youth of the Diocese

ASSISTING Msgr Scully at the Ma<swill be Rev Gerard DeLeonardis of Mt.

Carmel, Passaic, deacon, and Rev.

AloysiusJ. Busch of St. Monice's, Sussex,subdeacon. Deacons of honor to BishopMcNulty will be Msgr Joseph H Hew-elson of St.

#Paul's, Clifton, and Msgr

Andrew J. Romanak of Assumption,Passaic.

The sermon will ty* preached byMi.gr, John J. Kiley, director of CYO ac-tivities in the Archdiocese of Newark.Music will be~offered by the HXFvoic*choir of Pope Pius High School underthe direction of Sister Jean D'Arc. 0 P.

COM.MI'NION will be distributed to

those in attendance by 12 priests of theDiocese, who will be atationed at various

posts on the field.

Arrangements for the rally are be-

ing made by a special priests' committee

headed by Rev. Francis H, Murphy, dio-

cesan CYO director, and including dis-

trict directors Rev Leo Ryan. Rev Mar-

tin J Connolly, Rev Stanislaus J. Durka,

Rev. Francis J Feenan, Rev. Vincent E

Puma.

Cardinal Stritch StrickenA Day After Saying Mass

ROME Cardinal Stritch has suffered a “ceiebralvascular accident” damaging a blood vessel in the brain buthe remains conscious and lucid, according to a statementissued by his doctors.- His condition was first listed as

grave and there is a weakness in the muscles of the rightleg and of the face.

The doctors treating him, Dr.

Filippo Rocchi and Dr. RalphBergen, said they would reserve

prognosis for the present.The two doctors issued a state-

ment on Tuesday morning sayingthe Cardinal passed a good night.“His condition is satisfactory,”they said. “No complications have

occurred.” He is taking liquidnourishment.

The Cardinal had been givenExtreme Unction on Monday aft-iernoon. Priests from Chicagostudying in Rome stayed with himin shifts around the clock.

Dr. Riccardo Galeazzi-Lisi,per-sonal physician to Pope Pius XI,called at the hospital shortly after

i the Cardinal was stricken and re-

|ceived a report on his condition

from Dr. Bergen to give to the

Holy Father.

CARDINAL STRITCIIwas

stricken just one day after cele-brating Mass for the first timesince part of his right arm

was amputated three weeks ago,shortly after his arrival here totake up his ■duties as Pro-Prefectof the Sacred Congregation ofthe Faith.

The amputation was made be-

cause of a blood clot which hadformed, but it was termed suc-

cessful and he was progressing

nicely until his relapse. The

operation was on

Apr. 28, three days after he hadarrived with his arm in a sling.Exactly one week after the

operation he was able to leavethe hospital for an automobileride. A few days later his re-

covery was such that he was ableto leave the hospital daily to takehis noon meal at Chicago House,the residence for priests from the

Chicago Archdiocese taking grad-

uatc work in Rome. Then follow-ed celebration of his first Masssince the amputation.

AT DINNER after Mass theCardinal was in a jovial mood. Heblessed the newborn son of thechief of the Rome bureau of theInternational News Service, JohnCasserly of Chicago, and went foran automobile ride.

During the ride he asked tobe driven past the Basilica ofSt. John Lateran where he hadbeen ordained.The Cardinal was stricken two

days before he was to celebratethe 48th anniversary of his ordination on May 21. Arrangementshad been made for an audiencewith the Pope, which would havebeen the Cardinal’s first meetingwith the Pontiff since his opera-tion.

UPON HEARING of the new at-tack suffered by the Cardinal, the

Pope sent a special message ex-

pressing his solicitude and givinghis special blessing.

Dr. Pietro Valdoni, Italian card-iovascular specialist who per-formed the amputation, also ex-amined the Cardinal after hismost recent seizure and said thatthe Cardinal had suffered a

thrombosis.

Italy Rejects PetitionTo Censure Bishops

ROME Italian Premier Adone Zoli has rejected a

petition asking that he lodge a formal protest with theVatican against “the increasing interference of the clergy”in political matters.

The petition had been drafted by the Liberal andRepublican parties and chargedthe clergy with interfering on be-half of the Christian Democrats.

Specifically mentioned was the

joint statement issued by Italian

Bishops calling for Catholic unityat the polls May 25, election day.

IN A WRITTEN slatement re-

sponding to the petition. Premier

Zoli pointed out that the Italianconstitution guarantees equalrights to all citizens, and thatthe Bishops arc citizens on an

equal footing with others.

Answering a charge that the

Bishops had interfered with

public order in violation of theConcordat between the llolySee and Italy, he declared:"It is impossible for unpreju-

diced parties to interpret the

Italian Bishops' declaration as a

disloyal act aimed at disturbingpublic order. It was instead an

art which defends the moral and

religious values which are funda

mental for the future of the Italian nation "

The petition also protestedagainst Italian Catholic Action

groups supporting a particularparty.

Premier Zoli said that there

was nothing to prevent Catholic

Actionists from pursuing politicalinterests, independent from po

litical parties, "in the defenseof religion and of the freedomof the Church.”

Newark Among Leaders

Catholic Population JumpsMore Than Million in Year

NEW YORK The Catholic population of the U. S.,'Alaska and the Hawaiian Islands increased by 1,460,126during the past year,according to the 1958 OfficialCatholicDirectory published by P. J. Kenedy and Sons.

Compiled from figures supplied by every chanceryoffice throughout \the land, the

directory gives the total Catholic

population as 36,023,977. That isfar below the estimate of 43,635,-000 Catholics made by the U.S.Census Bureau last year.

IN AN EDITORIAL, ThomasB. Kennedy, editor of the direc-

tory, explains the discrepancy,pointing out that directory fig-ures are based on “recognized

membership” in the Church! that

is, membership which is knownas a certainty by Church offi-cials.

The Census Bureau based itsfigures on “claimed member-ship,” making a projection of

figures collected in a sample

survey made of 35,000 house-holds spread over 330 sampleareas.

According to the directory, the

Catholic population jumped by38.1% in the last 10 years, thenumber of Catholics rising by9,948,280.

NOW THERE ARE 26 archdio-ceses with a population of 16,-793,090 and 113 dioceses (an in-crease of three for the year) witha population of 19,230,887. Sevenarchdioceses and one diocese \(Brooklyn) have populations in!excess of 1,000,000, with Newark!(1,324,066) ranking behind Chica-I

go, Boston, New York and Phil-

adelphia in the list of archdio-!ceses but ahead of Detroit andLos Angeles. (See table on Page20).

Newark also reported ti>«third largest increase in Cath-olic population, up 04,945 from

the preceding year. Only Lot

Angeles and Philadelphiashowed a greater growth.

The 1958 directory lists 225members of the hierarchy, four

Cardinals, 31 Archbishops and 190l*;hops, the largest number inthe history of the Catholic Churchin this country.

There are now a record totalof 16,552 Catholic parishes in theU.S. and its two territories. Therewas an increase of 1,088 in thenumber of clergy, bringing thetotal to 50,813, There are now

31,145 diocesan clergy (an in-

crease of 664) and 19,668 reli-gious community priests (an In-

crease of 424).The number of seminarians is

also on the rise, 19,088 preparingfor diocesan work and 17,892 forreligious orders. Total number ofcandidates for the priesthood is

36.980.

Professed religious personnelinclude 9,694 Brothers (up 394)and 164,575 Sisters (up 1,918).'

the FULL-TIME teachingstaffs of all educational institu-tions under Catholic auspiceshave increased by 7,267 or 5.2%to a record total of 147,330. Theseinclude 35,129 lay teachers, anincrease of 13.5%.

Anew high of 13,557 educa-tional institutions is recorded,including 2,434 high schools and10,159 elementary schools. En-rollments are still on the rise,too. There were 783,155 pupilsin the high schools, an in-crease of close to 60,000. Ele-

mentary schools showed an in-

crease of more than 220,000 to3,921,522.

College enrollment is up by 12,-216, the fifth straight year inwhich an increase was recorded.The total now is 271,493, or a

23 3% jump in the last decade.Five new institutions bring the

total of Catholic special hospitalsto 138, which treated 213,911 pa-tients during 1957, while bed ca-

pacities have been increased by603 to present facilities for 11,-402. The number of general hos-pitals continues at 801, whichhave expanded their accommo-

dations to 131,070 beds. Patientstreated in 1957 increased by 660,-203 to a record high of 11,525,865.

FOR THE 12TH year in suc-

cession, the number of converts

entering the Church exceeded100,000, th» directory roportod.

During 1957, 140,414 persons be-

came Catholics, bringing the to-

tal conversions during the pastdecade to 1,278,054.

The 1,284,534 infant baptismsduring 1957 shows an increase of

28,101 for the year, compared toan increase of 41,191 infant bap-tisms during 1956. Marriages re-

corded in 1957 decreased by 7,889

to 325,249.

Proper Attire for Church?

Archbishop Has AnswerST PAUL. Minn, (RNS) Archbishop William 0 Brady

has called on Catholics of the St. Paul Archdiocese to dreaa

"reverently” when they go to church this summer

"It should be obvious, except possibly to the spirituallyblind, that a piece of Kleenex balanced upon the topknot is not

a hat. Bermuda shorts are not pants in Minnesota. Sandalashowing painted toenails are not shoes. A suntan is not cloth-ing.” he said.

CALLING LOR A’ return to the Sunday suit, the Archbishopspelled out what he considered proper attire fof church:

“For men, it would mean this: pressed trousers, a coat, aclean shirt closed at the throat with a necktie, freshly polishedshoes

"For the women, it means that fashions are for store win-

dows, not for the church. The head should be suitably coveredwith a hat, the dress such as to attract no attention, sleevesbelow the elbows, stockings, and shoes that are shoes, not bed-

room scuffles

Tor children (and here is where parents can be at theirbest), it means the beginning of a tradition of dress and actionwhich says: ‘We are going info the presence of God to pray, notto play; to worship and to adore One Who loves our souls.’Native good taste will spell out the rest."

HANDSOME REWARD: Bishop McNulty presents a $100 check to Merrill Hennionof St. Margaret's School, Morristown, winner of an essay contest on “What the Dio-cesan Development Fund Means." Looking on are, left to right, runnera-up Ellen

Kinney of Our Lady of the Lake High School and Margaret Mcßride of St. Nicholas,grammar school, Passaic, and Msgr. Denis Hayes, superintendent of schools for the

Diocese of Paterson.

People in the Week's NewsRev. WUliam R. Barry of Los

Angeles, archdiocesan charities

director, has been reappointed to

the Los Angeles County Proba-

tion Committee for four years.Magr. (Brig. Gen.) Terence P.

Finnegan, deputy chief of chap-lains for the Air Force, has been

named an official Air Force rep-resentative to the annual confer-

ence at the Allied Air Forces

Europe Chaplaincy ConsultativeCommittee meeting in-Paris May28-30.

Bishop Thomas Quinlan, S.S.C.,Regent of the Apostolic Delega-tion at Seoul, has been named an

assistant to the Papal throne.

Rev. (Cmdr.) Herman J.

Sohnurr of the Naval chaplainscorps has been awarded the Navyand Marine Corps Medal for her-oic conduct for persuading an

armed seaman to surrender fol-

lowing a fatal shooting spree a

year ago aboard a Navy cargo

ship in San Francisco Bay.Rev. Joseph Moncher, 1.M.C.,

of laleton, Calif., has been named

superior of the Consolata Fathers

in the U.S.Don Juan Carlos, who may one

day be king of Spain, paid a

courtesy call on Cardinal Spell-man during his recent visit to

New York City.Msgr. Gerald H. Klrwin, editor

of the Albany Evangelist, has

been given a special citation bythe Communication Art Guild in

Albany.Gen. Johann Speidel of Ger-

many, NATO commander of landforces in central Europe, has

been received in private audi-

ence by the Pope.CardinalLeger of Montreal has

arrived in Rome for a week’s

stay.Dr. Antonio de Oliveira Salazar

attended a Solemn Mass of

Thanksgiving in Lisbon markingthe 30th adversary of his ap-pointment as Premier of Portu-

gal.Rev. Protaslo Soares, editor of

the Catholic newspaper, India, in

Goa. has left for a two-year visit

to the U.S. to promote the beatif-cation cause of Rev. Angelo deSotisa.

Julius Raab, Chancellor of Aus-

tria, received an honorary doc-

torate of laws from Notre Dame

University.Archbishop Edward F. Hoban

of Cleveland has been named toreceive the 1958 National Awardof the American Committee on

Italian Migration for his out-

standing service to immigrants.Cardinal Wendel of Munich

was received in private audience

by the Pope.Richard Reid, editor of The

Catholic' News, and Very Rev.John A. Flynn, C.M., president of

St. John’s University, Brooklyn,will receive honorary degreesfrom lona College June 7.

Rev. John Courtney Murray,S.J., has been given the first an-

nual Christian Wisdom Award byLoyola University of Chicago.

Rev. Gilbert G. Fini, C.P.S.,of Springfield, Mass., has been

elected superior general of the

Stigmatine Fathers, the first

American elected to that post

since 1 the congregation was found-ed in 1810.

Rogler Baudier, authority on

Catholic history in Louisiana, will

receive an honorary doctorate oflaws from Notre Dame Semina-

ry, New Orleans.

CardinalLeger of Montreal has

been named Pontifical Legate tothe 300th anniversary celebrationof the Shrine of St. Anne de

Beaupre in July.Very Rev. Gilbert G. Flnl,

C.S.P., of Springfield, Mass., hasbeen elected superior general ofthe Stigmatine Fathers at a

meeting in Rome.

Causes. . .

Rev. Cyriac Ellas of India, a

member of the Syro-Malabar Rite

Carmelite order. Died in 1871 aft-

er founding monastery, Catholic

paper in 42 years as priest. Pre-

liminary investigations in beati-

fication cause under way in'ln-

dia. /Maria Enrica Dominici, Italian

nun. Born in 1929, died 1894. For

32 years superior general of the

Sisters of St. Anne of Providence.

Sacred Congregation of Rites met

in ante-preparatory session to

discuss her heroic virtues in be-

atification cause.

Died. . .

Msgr. Raymond J. Campion of

Rockville Centre, N.Y., 62, mod-

erator of the Brooklyn CatholicInterracial Council which he

founded.

Rev. Joseph M. McGowan of

Moscow, Pa., 55, former presi-dent of the National Cathdlic

Cemetery Conference.

‘HE’S NOT HEAVY—HE’S MY BROTHER’: The Chi-

nese refugee situation is a problem to the world—butnot to this winsome waif in Hong Kong who carriesher sleeping brother on her back and smiles broadly.

Sees Catholic Press Vital

To Growth of the ChurchRICHMOND, Va. Noting that we “must have a well-

informed laity,” Bishop Albert R. Zuroweste of Belleville,111., stressed the importance ofthe Catholic press as he gave

the keynote address at the annual Catholic Press Associa-

tion convention here.

“Our Catholic magazines, per-iodicals and weekly publicationsnow make it possible for every

Catholic layman to be an inform-

ed Catholic,” he declared, stress-

ing that it was up to the laity to“communicate the teaching and

practice of the Church” to others.

BIBHOP ZUROWESTE is hon-

orary president of the CPA and

episcopal chairman of the Press

Department, NCWC. He called

the Catholic press the “sentinel

of truth” and said that its mission

“is vital to the growth and de-

fense of the Church.”

“We must be alert con-

stantly to combat misinform-

ation, half-truths and deliberate

untruths frequently appearingin secular publications. Everysubject that has a moral and

social implication demands our

careful coverage and comment,”he told the editors.

The Bishop deplored attemptsto inject a religious motive into

almost every question today.“Certain group*,” ha aaid, have

developed a fetish regardingChurch-state relationship. Theyhave gone so tar as to attemptto destroy every vestige of our

nation aa a Christian nation.

..■

Led by a group of bigoted zealots,they read union of Church-state

into almost every phase of social

legislation and educational pro-posal.”

IN ADVANCING the Catholic

press, Bishop Zuroweste said, it

is important to reach the youthof the nation, particularly those

on the university level, and more

particularly those in secular insti-tutions.

Many students, he declared,“are exposed to teachings con-

trary to Catholic faith and

morals. They need the healthy.Intellectual nourishment of

Catholic Uteratute.*’

He proposed that Catholic liter-

ature be made available to them

through Newman Clubs or similar

organizations in the colleges.Withouta constant contact with

such literature,he asserted, “thesestudents are in danger of be-

coming victimized by secuWisticphilosophies that beget spiritualhavoc.”

Labor in ItalySeen ‘Evolving’MILAN, Italy (NC) The

world of labor in Italy “ia still

undergoing evolution and has not

yet reached its proper social

position," Archbishop Giovani B.

Montini of Milan declared here.

Speaking to about 6,000 mem-

bers of the Association of Chris-

tian Workers, the Archbishop saidthat those who believe "that thesocial question is settled” forgetthat in many ways "the fate of

the working classes cannot yet beconsidered secure and satisfac-

tory."He noted that the principal

theories of Marx are "old and

scientifically outmoded." But he

warned that Catholics should goslow in taking a more extreme

position than has already been

supported by the "autonomous

and strong” social doctrine otter-

ed by the Church.

More 'Bishops' Elected

Canton Reds Force

All but Two Priests

Into Patriotic UnitHONG KONG (NC) Catholic sources here havo con-

firmed reports from Peking that two more priests were

recently ‘elected’ bishops by the so-called Patriotic Associ-

ation of Chinese Catholics.

At one meeting in Paoting, capital of the Hopeiprovince, it was learned here,clergy and laymen "elected” Rev.

Wang Shou-chien as Bishop of

Yungnien, suffragan See of Pe-

king.The other new “bishop" is

named Shen Chu-ming, who was

“elected" Bishop of Soochow.

Soochow, erected as a diocesein IIH9, has never had its own

Bishop, but Bishop IgnatiusKung of Shanghai, who has beenin jail for several years. Is res-

ponsible for it in his capacity of

Apostolic Administrator of the

diocese.

IT WAS ALSO learned that ef-forts of the Chinese Red* to

undermine Catholic life in the

Canton Archdiocese have beensuccessful to the point of forcingall the priests except two to givetheir names as members of the

ao-called Patriotic Society ofChinese Catholics.

All the priests, except the two,who are ill, were told to attendanother slydy or indoctrinationcourse. Those In charge of par-ishes in the city have been al-lowed to return to their flock on

Sunday morning to say Mass, but

not- the priests in charge of coun-

try parishes.The principal subject to

which the priests were to direct

all their study and self-examina-

tion is: Why should not Cantonfollow the example of Hankow

and have a Bishop consecrated

independent of Rome?It la considered significant

here that np nntll now no

priest has been brought from

Hankow to Canton to Instruct

the “laggard" minds of Canton.

The government may he afraid

that such a priest would givean account which would not

square with the official com-

munist version of the Han->

how consecrations.

Canton, the nearest See to the

outside world, has been badly hit

by religious persecution. BishopDominic Tang, S.J., the Apostolic

Administrator, Is in jailwith five

of his 34 priests. Among the

more active members of the laity,20 have been arrested and are

now held, some condemned to

hard labor.

SIMILAR NEWS has come from

Hankow where three priests and

a layman have been sentenced to

various terms as “reactionaries,who preserve relations with im-

perialists and refuse to recognisethe ‘reformed Church.***

Included is the Vicar General

of the archdiocese, Magr. Odori-cue Uu, O.F.M, who was aen-

teaced to 10 years.

French Africans

Given CautionsDAKAR, French West Africa

The Archbishops of French ter-ritories in Africa have warnedCatholics against the “mirages"of communist concepts of thestate. At the same time, theycautioned them not to put unlim-ited confidence in the possibili-ties offered to mankind by scien-tific progress.

The dual warning was con-tained in a jointstatement issued

by the Archbishops following a

meeting, the first of its kind, atwhich missionary and educational

problems were discussed.

Noting the changes whichhave already taken place in Af-rica, the Archbishops said theycould not remain indifferent toan evolution which is “full of

hazards, but also of hope.” Theycalled on their people to uniteand to benefit by the experienceof nations which have achieved

a more advanced economic devel-opment.

The Archbishops suggested thatan African Institute for Socialand Economic Research be or-

ganized, and urged men in politi-cal life not to be afraid to seek

truly African solutions to Africanproblems.

Bishop DeploresHorror MoviesMELBOURNE, Australia (NC)Auxiliary Bishop Arthur Fran-

cis Fox of Melbourne asserted

here that so-calle# horror movieshave “a strong influence, and inmost cases a wrong influence, on

young people."Speaking in the wake of a num-

ber of incidents in which policehave had to be called to quelljuvenileviolence after “midnighthorror shows,” Bishop Fox said:“I cannot understand how any

parents would let their childrenattend these films."

For the Church

Public RelationsOfficers UrgedHOBART, Australia (RNS)

Appointment of Catholic publicrelations officers in Australia’s

capital cities was urged in a res-

olution adopted by the Catholic

Press Association of Australia

and New Zealand at its annualconvention here. A copy of the

resolution was forwarded to theAustralian hierarchy.

“Public relations officers shouldbe appointed to the Australian

capital cities to work in coopera-tion with the diocesan press and

to prepare news stories and mag-azine articles for the secular

press,” it said.

“The convention,” the resolu-tion stated, “believes that until

a daily newspaper of Catholic

inspiration is established, everyeffort should be made to pene-trate the public mind through the

existing media of communication.

It believes that the persons ap-pointed as public relations offi-

cers should be fully trained and

experienced in the techniques ofdiffusion through the press, ra-

dio and television.”

Placea in the Week's NewsFranciscan Brothers in Brook-

lyn on May M will open a year-

long celebration of the 100th an-

niversary of the founding of the

congregation there.

Anew $335,000 addition to the

Catholic student center at Louisi-

ana State University, * Baton

Rouge, La., has been dedicated.Vatican Radio has again

warned Catholics in Poland to be

on guard against efforts by Pax,“progressive” Catholic organiza-tion, to gain public acceptance.

The international Building Or-der of the Aid for Eastern

Priests’ organization this yearwill undertake 77 construction

projects for Catholic refugees andother charitable purposes, it hasbeen announced in Germany.

The New York Court of Ap-peals, by a 4-3 vote, has uphelda ban against a motion picture(“Lady Chatterly’s Lover”) onth ground that it is immoral.

The Shrine of Our Lady of

Lourdes at the St. Louis de Mont-fort Seminary in Connecticut willbe blessed May 30.

A jeweled $BO,OOO crown stolenfrom the venerated image of the

Madonna of Graces in the San

Lorenzo Cathedral, Perugia, It-

aly, has been recovered and re-

placed on the statue.

GifU valued at $BO,OOO have

been stolen from the shrine of

Our Lady of Graces at Beneven-

to, Italy.Notre Dame College, operated

by Holy Cross Fathers from the

U.S., has been named the out-

standing college in Egst Paki-

stan. -

The Legion of Mary has been

praised as the Catholic Action

group doing the most fruitful

work in Korea.

A chalice containing 48 ounces

of pure gold and many precious

stones collected over a four-yearperiod will be given to the Na-

tional Shrine of the Immaculate

Conception by the Knights of Co-

lumbus of Texas.

A theology class for 250 per-

sons, most of them non-Catholic,is being conducted each week in

San Diego by Bishop Charles F.

Buddy.Fides, mission news service

published in Rome, reports that

communist activity in French

West Africa is definitely on the

increase, t

Twenty-two Catholics were ar-

rested while holding a demonstra-

tion against a communist-spon-sored anti-Catholic play in Mep-

padi, India.

A 15th century Madonna paint-ing has been donated to St. Bona-

venture University, New York.

Catholic clergymen in France

preached special Sunday “peace”sermons urging the people to

keep calm and respect the au-

thorities during the current polit-ical cisis.

Some 200,000 Catholics took

part in a monster rally In Brus-

sels in protest against the So-

cialist-Liberal government’s pol-icy toward Catholic schools.

U.S. School Plans

Classes in MexicoNEW ORLEANS (NC)

Classes in a division of the

1958 summer school of LoyolaUniversity of the South here

will be conducted in Mexico

City.Two six-weeks sessions will

be held at the Universidad

Iberoamericano, which * like

Loyola is conducted by the

Jesuits. Students will live in

dormitories there and make

field trips to points of interestin Mexico.

2 THE ADVOCATE May 24,1958

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Druggists Veto

Sunday SalesHARRISBURG, Pa.

_ Drug-gists in Pennsylvania are over-whelmingly in favor of Sundayclosings. A poll of members ofthe State Pharmaceutical Asso-ciation showed 1,570 in favor ofclosing their stores on Sundaysand 659 opposed.

The druggists also decided,by a 1,458 to 699 vote, to backSunday closing legislation be-

ing prepared for presentationto the 1959 legislature.

Sunday selling also came un-der fire on two other fronts.In Green Bay, Wis., BishopStanislaus V. Bona joined withother groups in asking theGreen Bay Association of Com

merce to help halt the trendtoward Sunday store openings.

In Nashville, Tenn., two gro-cers sought an injunction tokeep two drive-in markets fromopening on Sunday in violationof state law.

ANNUAL EVENT: Archbishop Boland- presided at the annual dinner honoring thespiritual directors of the Essex-West Hudson Federation of Holy Name Societies

May 13 in Newark.With officers and other Principals grouped around, he is shown

here withMsgr. Jame F. Looney, Chancellor,Auxiliary Bishop Martin W. Stanton,Msgr. Cornelius J. Boyle, archdiocesan director of the ACCM, and Auxiliary Bishop

Walter W. Curtis.

New RegulationsFor Swiss GuardVATICAN CITY (NC) New

regulations governing the PapalSwiss Guard have been presentedto the Pope for approval and are

expected to go into effect with-in a month. The regulations haveto do with the internal disciplineof the Swiss Guard.

Up to now the Swiss Guard hasbeen governed by the regulationsapproved in 1914.

FOR LONG SERVICE: Margaret Finn of St. Michael’sparish receives the good wishes of Auxiliary BishopWalter W. Curtis, left, archdiocesan director of theConfraternity of Christian Doctrine, and Msgr. LeRoyE. McWilliams, St. Michael’s pastor. Miss Finn washonored at a dinner for her 25 years of service, as a

catechetical teacher.

In Northern Ireland

Wayward Boys Get

Special TreatmentBELFAST (NC) Anyone traveling near Belfast, cap-

ital of Northern Ireland, and seeing the imposing new build-ings of St. Patrick’s Training School, might be surprised tolearn that it is a school for boys committed there by thecourts.

The facilities of the school-

one of 17 under Catholic auspices,including 11 conducted by theChristian Brothers are excel-lent. It has fine assembly hallsand dormitories, a gymnasiumand indoor swimming pool, a con-

cert hall and football field.

This is typical of the policyfollowed nowadays throughoutthe United Kingdom. The word

"reformatory” is never heard.

BEING SENT to an approved1school often means that a boy is

given a much better opportunity!to equip himself for life than hecould otherwise have had. Such

schools, Catholic and others,come under the authority of Brit-ain's Home Office—or of theNorthern Irish Ministry of HomeAffairs—not of the Ministry ofEducation. This is a reminderthat they were originally penalin character, controlled by the

same department that controlsthe prisons.

The law requires that Catho-lic boys who have to be sent tosuch schools shall, where prac- Iticable, be sent to one of the !17 Catholic schools.

It is a basic principle of thetraining given to boys in the ap-proved schools that book workmust be combined with technicaltraining and physical education.It must develop the whole boyand not the mind only is the be-lief of those in charge.

St. Patrick’s is splendidlyequipped for training in mechan-ical engineering, woodwork and

cabinetmaking, tailoring, pottery jand other handicrafts. It has ac-

commodations for 200 boys. Run-|ning costs are shared equally by|the government of Northern Ire-jland and the government of those!areas from which boys have been jsent to the school.

Church in Poland Will Not Try to RegainLarge Land Holdings, Bishop Declares

WROCLAW, Poland (NC)-TheChurch in western Poland has no

thought pf trying to regain its

large land holdings seizecj by thecommunists in 1950, Bishop Bo-leslaw Kominek declared here.

The Bishop spoke on the tasks

facing the Church in the westernterritories, former German lands

now under Polish administration.

BISHOP KOMINEK, in chargeof the part of the Wroclaw Dio-

cese under Polish rule, said he“has more important . . . tasksthan vindicating those enormous

land holdings—and first of all has

enough horse sense to know thatthe possession of large land hold-

ings by the Church would in to-

day’s political conditions threat-en the Chureh . . . with apostasyby the masses of peasants andworkers.’’

Bishop Kominek added, how-

ever: “On the other hand wewill try stubbornly, with all le-gal means, for some minimum

of subsistence, for a roof overthe religious order or any otherChurch institution for thatminimum which is necessaryfor equitable performance ofthe pastoral office and the

apostolate.”

Asserting that the Church isand will continue to be "one ofthe fundamental elements of in-ternal stabilization in the westernlands,” the 54-vear-old prelate de-nounced anti-Semitic and anti-German activities.

“We are an organic part of thegreat Universal Church,” he said,“and we cannot allow ourselvesto be pushed into the narrow backstreet

...of intolerance, which

is incompatible with the teach-

ings of Christ and with the cen-turies-old Polish, national tradi-tion.”

IN THE SAME vein, BishopKominek said:

“We want relations betweenPolish and German Catholics

gradually to be cleansed of thatinternal poison which has beenaffecting them for generations.

We extend our hand to all menof good will who think the same

way we do. We extend that handfrom an equal position, without

any inferiority complex, becausewe are convinced that the timeis irretrievably over when we

Poles, and in general all Slavs,were considered second-class na-

tions.”

Touching on the fact that the !ceding of the former eastern i

territories of Germany to Po-land under the Potsdam agree-ment has not been finalized byinternational treaty, Bishop Ko-minek said:

“The Church does not wait andcannot wait with its mission untilall international formalities havebeen performed to the last iota

• It is life, life which is strong-er, which in large measure cre-ates international' treaties.”

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Catholic Farm Leader ScoresFederal Program as Senseless

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (NC)America’s farm program, in

some aspects, lacks both com-

mon sense and common justice,the executive director of the Na-tional Catholic Rural Life Con-ference said here.

Msgr. Luigi G. Ligutti offereda critical analysis of the pricesupport program, of the agitationfor moving “marginal producers"off the land, and of administra-tive practices in the distributionof surplus farm goods overseas.

Msgr. Ligutti considers the ideaof price supports as a means of

helping farmers ridiculous.

“THE FARMERS are produc-ing a great abundance of goods

too much, the government

aays,” he said. “So the govern-ment enters the market, buystome of these goods, and putsthem away. It costs $1,000,000 a

day just to store this ‘surplus,’as they call it, not to speak ofthe cost of buying it.

“Because these goods are

taken off the market, natural-

ly prices are higher. So whatdoes this mean? It means that

we are paying taxes so that

we can pay higher prices for

our food.”

He wag asked about the effect

on the farmer of suspending pricesupports.

“Naturally, the Rural Life Con-

ference does not mean that thefarmer should be left at the mer-

cy of the market, when he has solittle control over it. We simplyoppose the illogical and doublyexpensive system now beingused," he said.

A BETTER WAY, he suggest-ed, would be to let the farmer

produce what he wants to andmarket it without controls. Thefarmer would then receive, di-

rectly from the government, thedifference between the cost ofproduction and a “reasonable”

rate of return on his investment

and labor. Such a plan would

bring an immediate and sharpdrop in prices, and the price re-

duction would in turn have theseeffects:

• Consumers would benefit fi-

nancially.• Consumption would increase

especially among poorer families.

• The cost of administering the

program would be reduced be-

cause of the simplicity of the

system.“Farmers certainly aren’t get-

ting sufficient income now to jus-tify their investments and recom-

pense them for their labor. Theirincome is down by perhaps as

much as 30%, while prices have

gone up 10%,” he estimated.

IF PRICE SUPPORTS are to

be retained, he argued, they

should be administered with an

eye to the realities of farm op-erations. He took issue sharplywith the theory, frequently ad-vanced by Agriculture SecretaryEzra Taft Benson, that reduc-tions in price supports will auto-

matically reduce production.“I know a young farmer, near

Des Moines,” Msgr. Ligutti ob-

served. “When he is told that

subsidies are being cut, he rea-

sons like this:

“I’ve got to have a certain

amount of income to keep the

farm and my family going.Therefore since my unit

profit is being reduced Iwill

have to increase production. Ithink I’ll buy two more cows’.”He has small patience with the

suggestion that huge farms are

necessarily more “efficient” than

family-operated farms. What bigproducers call “efficiency’ 1 issometifnes a screen for some-

thing very different, he declared.

“Big producers' have to hire

many laborers, and sometimes

they do it at very low wages

migratory laborers can’t resist,because the big producers are

well organized.”

THOUGH HE doesn't insist thatall persons now living on theland should stay there, he if crit-ical of the proposal to take 2,000,-000 small producers out of agri-culture and into industry. Msgr.Ligutti doubts that it would solvethe surplus problem. He is doubt-ful also of its prudence as a so-cial measure. He has reserva-

tions also about its effect onthose most directly concerned.He observed:

"First of all, what are you go-

ing to do with these people? If

they are inefficient on the farm,they are not suddenly going tobecome efficient because youhave moved them to the city.Many of them have too little ed-ucation to adjust, and no skills

they can use off the farm.

“And if yon are trying to re-

duce the surplus, why remove

the small farmers, who con-

tribute so little to the surplus?”Msgr, Ligutti gave the impres-

sion that he sees something il-

logical and unhealthy in talkingof abundant production as "sur-

plus,’’ especially when there are

hundreds of thousands of under-nourished people In this countryand millions overseas.

Bishop Directs

Air Force, NavyTORONTO, Ont. (NC)

Bishop Joseph M. Trocellier,0.M.1., Vicar Apostolic of Mac-

kenzie, in Canada's Northwest

Territories, is one of the few.

Bishops who commands a

squadron of planes and a fleet

of ships.True, the squadron has only

two planes and the fleet is

made up of several smallboats and a 70-foot schooner.But they’re all needed byBishop Trocellier and his

priests to cover the vast Mac-kenzie vicariate.

Bishop Trocellier, here to

buy the second plane for his

“squadron," said there areabout 8,800 Catholics in theMackenzie population of morethan 17,000. From Fort Smith,where he hopes to build a

new cathedral, to the Arctic,where missionary work is car-ried out among the Eskimoes,the journey is 1,000 miles byair and much longer by boat.

Cloistered Life

Shows GrowthVATICAN CITY (NC) _ Con-

tempUtive orders are undergo-ing an extraordinary growth inAfrica, according to OsservatoreRomano, Vatican City daily.

The paper quoted Rev. Arcadio

Larraona, Secretary of the Sa-cred Congregation of Religious,as stating recently that the HolySee “wishes the penetration ofevery diocese by cloistered or-ders, and favors the foundationof monasteries in mission terri-tories.”

In the Union of,South Africa

plans are being made to found

new convents for native women,the Vatican paper said, becausethe country’s racial laws do notallow white and Negro Religiousto live together.

The newspaper said that thequestion of native vocations in-volves financial difficulties. Afri-can postulants do not bring a

dowry with them as is done else-where in the world, it said, sinceAfrican custom is that it is thefamily of the bridegroom, not thebride, which provides the dowry.

Spanish Workers Told ChurchNot at Fault for Labor’s IllsMADRlD—Employers who pro-

fess to be Catholics and yet payless than a just wage to theirworkers do great harm to theChurch in Spain; according toCardinal Pla y Deniel of Toledo,Primate of Spain.

In auch cues, the Cardinal

said, “Workers will often blamethe Church for the shortcomingsof other Catholics.” Althoughthis attitude is unjust, he said,many of them leave the Churchbecause of it and thus “do dam-

age to themselves and to their

own souls.”

“To withdraw from theChurch," he said, “means towithdraw from God and His

graces, which is true spiritualsuicide.”

THE CARDINAL spoke to a

large group of workers here, out-lining the Church’s views on la-bor justice and deploring that at-titude which would ally theChurch with government-spon-sored labor movements. He also

charged that the work of Cath-olic Action organizations in thelabor field has been hindered in

Spain and that at times the wordsof the Bishops have been ig-nored, even by the workers.

Noting that Spanish labor or-

ganisations were created to In-,elude both management and la-

bor, the Cardinal pointed outthat they are government insti-tutions that do not requiretheir members to belong to a

specific religious group.

"However," he said, "labor or-

ganizations have asked theChurch for religious counselors,and the Church has providedthem

. ..

“But the fact that these coun-selors were appointed to providefor the spiritual care of members

. . . did not change these in-

stitutions into apostolic organiza-tions nor does the Church haveany direct jurisdiction in them.”

FOR THIS REASON, CardinalPla y Deniel said, the hierarchyin 1939 established its own or-

ganizations—the Labor Confra-

ternity of Catholic Action, theMovement of Social and Man-agement Action and the YoungChristian Workers.

"But these apostolic associa-tions,” he said, “cannot be-

come labor organizations underthe present Spanish legisla-tion.”

Referring to the position of the

hierarchy with regard to socialand labor questions, Cardinal Play Deniel said:

“The Bishops may be asked toexpound the true doctrine and the

principles which, in these ques-tions, are derived from moralsand right . . . Many, nearly allthe improvements made on be-half of the workers, find theirinception in Papal Encyclicals;nevertheless, neither manage-ment, the workers, nor even the

government, welcomed them as

they should have been wel-

comed.”

“We thus feel,” he contin-

ued, “that the work of our

apostoHite it being hinderedand we cannot help but be sur-

prised at the fact that the

teachings of the Bishops haveat times silenced, and at

other times been received in a

very lukewarm manner..

Noting then that the hierarchyin Spain has been asked some-

times to undertake tasks outsideof its jurisdiction, the Cardinal

stated:

“On our part we have said

clearly that the responsibility forcivil laws lies with the govern-ment that issues them, and that

only in the case of irreligiouslaws or those that stand clearlyagainst natural rights, does theChurch pass judgment on civillaws.

| “Neither does the Church in-

: tervene in judging concrete cases,in solving labor conflicts, exceptin specific cases where both par-ties solicit her arbitration forthe good of social peace.”

IN A FINAL exhortation to the

workers, Cardinal Pla y Denielrecalled the social teachings of

Pope Leo XIII, Pope Pius XIand Pope Pius XII, and said:

“According to the social* doc-trine of the Church, different

classes do exist in reality, butthere are no insurmountablebarriers between them; anyworker or worker's son

. . .

can rise to the highest.“The Church preaches that cul-

ture must be made available tothe working classes, and sets the

example herself—the majority of

priests come from humble fam-

ilies, and throughout her historythe Church has had prelates andPontiffs who were the sons ofworkers.”

Asserts Church

Aids ArtistsVATICAN CITY (NC) The

limit* the Church ha* placed on

religious art have proved a help-ful discipline and a source ofgreater inspiration to artists.Pope Pius XII asserted here.The Pope told an audience ef stu-dents and directors of the French

Academy of Rome that this pointhas been proved by history.

Welcoming the group, he de-clared; “We should wish that

many of you might find an occa-sion to consecrate the talentsGod has given you to Hi* honorin a special way. It has alwaysbeen difficult for men to pas*from the sensory to the spiritual,to elevate themselves from im-

perfect beauty to Beatity par ex-

cellence.“Those whom God has given

such an essential gift have a

duty to give thanks for it and toendeavor to help men."

Establish Liaison

Between Vatican,UN Food GroupVATICAN CITY (NC) - An in-

formation center has been established here to relay data avail-able at the United Nations Foodand Agricultural- Organization tomissionaries in the field and sem-inarians studying in Rome.

The information center hasbeen established by the HolySee’s representatives to the FAO.

| Pope Pius XII recently heard a

I report on the center in an audi-

ence with Msgr. Luigi Ligutti, a,

I permanent observer for the HolySee at the FAO and director ofthe U. S. National Catholic RuralLife Conference.

Dr. Walter Persegati, formernational secretary of the youthsection of Italian Catholic Action,has been named secretary of theliaison center.

The new office will keep inter-ested Church departments in-formed of FAO programs. It will

pass on FAO technical knowl-edge in agriculture, fisheries,forestry and nutrition. It willalso keep FAO informed of mis-

aionary activities in this fieldand will set up contacts betweenmissionaries and FAO field rep-resentations. It also hopes tofamiliarize seminarians studyingin Rome with FAO programs.

Peruvian ArchbishopWill Address Serra

CHlCAGO—Archbishop JuanLandaturi • Ricketts of Lima,Peru, will outline ways in whichthe Church in the U.S. can helprebuild the Faith in Latin Amer-ica in an address at the SerraInternational convention hereJune X.

The Archbishop, who has es-tablished Serra clubs in his arch-diocese, will spehd severalmonths in this country studyingother diocesan and parochial or-

ganisations which could be adapt-ed to Latin American needs.

BEE BOWLERS BEST: Carl Fehrenvach, captain of St. Benedict’s (Newark) bowlingteam, receives the Essex-West Hudson Holy Name Bowling League trophy from Msgr.Cornelius J. Boyle, spiritual director. Looking on are Rev. Celestine Staab, O.S.B.,

pastor of St. Benedicts, and John Rears, president of the loop.

IT’S ALL YOURS: Robert Garibaldi, right, outgoingpresident of the St. Peter’s College alumni, congratu-lates the new president, Edwin Rauscher ’49, as VeryRev James J. Shanahan, S.J., president of St. Peter’s,looks on. Installation took place at the annual home-

coming May 17.

Circus Arenas Site

Of Special MassesHAMBURG, Germany

Masses were said in eight circus

arenas here for performers withthe shows. The Masses, whichmark the opening of the circusseason, were celebrated by Rev.

Heinzpeter' Schoenig.Father Schoenig was recently

named by Pope Pius XII to takecharge of the spiritual care ofcircus people.

Ohio KnightsAid TeachersCLEVELAND (RNS) - A $5O,

000 scholarship fund for prospec-

tive teachers in Ohio Catholic

schools has been set up by the

Ohio Council of the Knights of

Columbus in an effort to help re-

lieve the teacher shortage.

Recipients must agree to

teach for two years after gradua-tion in parish schools of the

state’s six diocesan school sys-

tems. The council will provide 50

two-year scholarships.

Money for the initial grantswas donated state council

and 211 local councils. A Knightsof Columbus Youth Foundation,

Inc., has been set up to adminster

the fund. It is hoped to make

scholarships available each year.

SUPPORT church charities.

4 THE ADVOCATE May 24,1988

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Archdiocesan Priests Mark Jubileeslarian hZd i ict^fdiamond jubilarian and a golden jubi-who are observing

Pf lests of the Archdiocese of Newarkwno are observing anniversaries this year.

years "n3

the'mi'J| sh

N7^k pr'ests will be “Crating 25

vary but .1, Z‘ *" «* P™>« win*

wuo

vary but all were ordained in theSpring, 60, 50 or 25 years ago.

THE DIAMOND jubilarian isMsgr. Peter Kurz, pastor, St. Ven-antius, Orange, who was ordainedJune 29, 1898.

nca

Msgr. James J. Owens, pastor•f St. Mary’s, Nutley, is the gold-•n jubilarian. He was ordainedJune 13, 1908.

With the exception of threepriests, all the lubilarians weremembers of the class ordainedon June 10, 1933. The three areMsgr. James J. Carberry, ViceChancellor and pastor of St. Jo-seph’s, Roselle, ordained July 9,1933; Msgr. John J. Dougherty,Immaculate Semina-ry, July 23, 1933; and Rev. AlbertJ. Hess, pastor, St. Ann’s, New-ark, May 25, 1933.

THE SILVER jubilarians or-dained June 10, 1933 are:

Rev. John T. Lawlor, pastor,Holy Trinity Coytesville.

Rev. Michael G. Kemezis, pas-tor, SS. Peter and Paul, Eliza-beth.

Rev. Francis J. Ballinger, pas-tor, St. Pius X, Old Tappan.

Rev. Thomas F. Duffy, pastor,St. Michael’s, Palisades Park.

Rev. Francis J. Lind, pastor,St. Boniface, Jersey City.

Rev, Joseph A. Smolen, pastor,St. Adalbert’s, Elizabeth.

Rev. Michael I. Fronczak, Se-ton Hall University.

Rev. Thomas F. Burke, pastor,Our Lady Queen of Peace, May-wood.

Rev. Thomas J. Donnelly, pas-

tor, Immaculate Conception, Eliz-abeth.

•Rev. J. Emmett Knox, pastor,Christ the King, Hillside.

Rev. John F. Pagach, pastor,Our Lady of the Most BlessedSacrament, Roseland.

Rev. Joseph L. Donnelly, pas-tor, St. Mary’s, Jersey City.

Msgr. Kurz

Msgr. Owens

Msgr, Carberry

Msgr. Dougherty

Father Hess

Father Lawlor

Father Kemezis

Father Ballinger

Father Duffy

Father Fronczak

Fr. Thomas Donnelly

Fr. Joseph Donnelly

Polish Births JumpDespite Red DriveWARSAW (NC) Despite the

Polish government's stepped-upbirth control campaign, the birthrate in this country reached an

all-time high two years ago andhas been steadily increasing•ince.

Figures made available hereindicate that 526,000 babies were

born in 1956. That was 67,000more than in 1932 in spite of thefact that the population of Polandis today smaller by several mil-lions than before the war, andabortions have been made “leg-al.”

Criticizes Portugal’sPolicies in Colony

LUANDA, Angola (NC) A Bishop warned the legis-lative council of Angola that European and African popula-tions must live together if Christian principles are to ani-mate all the races of this southwest African colony.

Bishop Manuel Nunes Gabriel of Malange, Angola, a

member of the council, urgedthat the Portuguese home

eminent be more selective in

choosing persons to immigrate toAngola and that more schoolingfacilities be provided for Angolanatives. He said education ofnative boys is sadly lacking andis almost non-existent for native

girls.“Little can be done for the im-

provement of family life and,thus of African society, without

the formation and instruction ofthe women.” he added.

THE BISHOP also pointed outweaknesses in the home govern-ment’s colonization schemes

which have hindered cooperationbetween Portuguese immigrantsand the natives.

He said the government

policy of having everythingready for the new arrivals,even to the furnishing of their

homes, removes any incentive

these colonisers mSht have to

become attached to their new

land and surroundings.Also, he said, the closed col-

\ onies of European farmers are

jhindering the growth of mutualI understanding between the dif-

ferent ethnical groups.This, he said, “seems contrary

to this ideal that the same Chris-

tian, moral and social principlesshould animate all the races inthis country. There is a dangerthat in some years time thewhite population will be concen-

trated in certain zones and thenative in others, thus formingtwo impenetrable blocks. It wouldbe better if native families were

interspersed with European fam-ilies in these farming settlements.

The prelate said that manypersons coming from Portugal are

simple people without special-ized skills'who are seeking for-tunes. He urged the home govern-ment to require evidence ofsound character from persons in-

tending to immigrate to this col-

ony and suggested that they be

obliged to attend a course relat-

ing to life overseas before.

Union OrganizedSAN SALVADOR, El Salvador

(RNS)—A national Union of Cath-olic Workers has been formedhere with an initial enrollment

of 200 members.

East Germans Told

To Resist PressureBONN, Germany (RNS) The Bishops of Eastern

Germany, in a joint pastoral letter, called upon Catholics

in the Soviet Zone to resist with determination all attemptsto pressure them into godless atheism.

Read in all East. German Catholic churches, thepastoral said the situation of the!Soviet Zone Christians has sub-'stantially worsened since last!

Fall and the intimidation "of

freedom and faith and consciencehas become ever more severe.”

THK BISHOPS charged that"floods of slanders and distor-tions are being poured upon the

Church, its teachings and lead-ers.”

“Despite repeated assuranc-

es that communist youth dedi-cation is voluntary,” they said,“state authorities are employ-ing rigid coercion to compelyouth to participate in cere-

monies aimed at deprivingChristian children of their belief in God, Christ and theChurch.”

The communist- sponsored

youth dedication rites are an

atheistic counterpart of ChristianConfirmation. Both Protest-antand Catholic authorities have

consistently warned parents andchildren against taking part inthem.

The Bishops declared thatmeanwhile human rights and theEast German constitution are vi-olated "as honorable and consci-

entious citizens are ousted fromjobs or hindered from carryingout their professions only becausethey refuse to leave the Churchor renounce the practice of reli-

gion.”

Repeated written and oral re-

quests to the Soviet Zone regimeto stop coercing individuals andto cease attemptlpg to curtail

church life have remained un-

successful, the Bishops com-

plained.

"Nevertheless,” they told the

Catholic faithful, "we will con-

tinue to stand up for your rightsand the freedom of the Church.’*

Cardinal’s Book

Irks Red Writer

WARSAW, Poland (NC) A

new edition of "The Spirit of Hu-

man Labor," written in 1946 byCardinal Wyszynski, Primate oI

Poland, has been criticized in thecommunist weekly, Polityka.

The book, published immediate-

ly after World War 11, containslectures delivered secretly by theCardinal when he was rector ofthe Wloclawek diocesan semi-

nary during the German occupa-tion.

Writing in Polityka, TadeusiJaroszewski accuses Cardinal

Wyszynski of directing the whole

problem of "liberating labor" in-

to a false road because he looksfor a solution in the actions of a

moral person within the frame-work of the capitalist system.

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Holy Father Endorses NATOIn Sadness for Its NeedVATICAN CITY- (RNS)

Pope Pius XII endorsed the

North Atlantic Treaty Organi-zation as a necessity if the West

il to be “on the alert against apenemy that goes around like a

roaring lion seeking whom he

can devour.”

However, he stressed that

“with confidence and reason-

able optimism one must work

toward the day when protectionand defense can be assuredwith minimum force.”

The 82-year-old Pontiff spokeat an audience to officials and

students of the NATO Defense

College, located in Paris. In an

obvious reference to commu-

nism, he quoted St. Paul’s ad-vice to the Ephesians to “puton the armor of God that youmay be able to stand up againstthe deceits of the devil.”

‘ POPE PIUS, who spoke in

English, said man's spiritualstruggle for the salvation of hissoul “will go on to the end oftime” and there will "never be

a day nor an hour but that man

must be individually on thealert to defend himself if hewould not be overcome.”

“However,” he said, “the

purpose of your College is

quite different, because it

teaches you how to be alert

against the attack of your fel-

lowman in he world.”

“Is it not sad,” he asked, “toreflect that this defense is nec-

essary That man would rob

man of those rights which are

but the natural flowering of

the dignity of his person, whichis enhanced infinitely by the

value placed upon it by the Di-

vine Redeemer?

’ “Would not one expect thatall members of the vast human

family should be happy toshare in common that personalright that is above that of the

state, that they should be able

to fulfill their sacred duties totheir Creator as well as theirnatural right to develop their

own culture and character,freed from the spectre of a hos-

tile force?”

CONCEDING that “one mustface reality,” the Pope never-

theless urged a hopeful outlook

on the future.

“With confidence and rea-

sonable optimism,” he said,

"one must work toward the daywhen protection and defense

can be assured with minimum

force, and when with equaljustice for all shall be the

guideposts tenaciously followed

by those whose grave task is tolead peoples to the supremegoal of a lasting peace.”

Concluding his talk, PopePius commented: “Truth and

equal justice for all —*how

precious and ennobling, but

yet how hollow, these words

ring for those who do not be-lieve in God.”

Warned on Sale

OfReligious ArtVATICAN CITY (NC) - Ita-

ly’s Bishops hatfe been asked totake steps to control the sale of

religious art objects for profaneuse.

The request was made in a let-ter from the Pontifical Commis-sion for Sacred Art in Italy,which had been informed by theItalian government’s Central Of-fice for Antiquities and Fine Artsthat Church furnishings, statuesand paintings have been findingtheir way into antique shops.

The sale of sacred art objectshas become common in Italy,

particularly in postwar years.With the passing of the centuries

and shifts in population, hundreds

of church buildings have been leftin disuse, leaving a plentiful sup-ply of antique pieces. The sac-

risties and storerooms of many

country churches, where the cler-

gy and faithful live in poverty,are filled with them.

Ask Religion,PsychiatryTo Join HandsSAN FRANCISCO (NC)-A call

for mutual appreciation by cler-

gymen and psychiatrists of their

complementary, but distinct,roles in patient treatment was

made at the American Psychia-tric Association’s 14th annual

meeting here.

The call was made in a pa-

per prepared by Dr. John C.

Cavanaugh of Washington, D. C.,a past president of the Guild ofCfttholic Psychiatrists, and Rev.Ramon A. di Nardo, Catholic

chaplain at St. Elizabeth’s Hos-

pital for the mentally ill, Wash-

ington.Dr. Cavanagh, who read the

paper, said that “in the processof moving closer together, it be-

comes necessary for each disci-

pline to take a positive stand

on the question of the other andits significance, not only in psy-

schotherapy, but in human liv-

ing.’’He said both “are possessors

of an incomplete knowledge of

one of God’s infinite mysteries,that of the human personality.”The two have a “broad and in-

telligent view of that personality,but from different vantagepoints,” he added.

Feis Committee Holds

Thomas Moore FeteNEW YORK - The Feis com-

mittee of the United Irish Coun-ties Association will hold itsannual Thomas Moore Festivalat 3 p.m., May 24, in CentralPark here.

t

City Magistrate James J. Com-erford will deliver the principaladdresa. Other speakers will beJames A. Fitzpatrick, presidentof the United Irish Counties, andJohn P. Cashin, Feis chairman.

Mihtary PilgrimageHEIDELBERG, Germany (NC)Over 33,000 Catholic service-

men from 15 nations and their

families will attend an interna-tional military pilgrimage to

Lourdes June 14-16.

FROM ONE SITE TO ANOTHER: Rev. Leo F. Lambert, pastor of St. Therese, Suc-casunna, inspects the progress of work on his church. The building formerly be-longed to St. Therese parish, Paterson, where Father Lambert was assistant. Offeredby Rev. James J. Doyle, Paterson pastor, the building was dismantled piece by pieceand transported to the new St. Therese parish where it is being re-erected by vol-

unteer help

Italian ‘City’ Converted

ShowsHow to Win Friends,

Influence CommunistsBy Rev. James I. Tucek

TARANTO, Italy (NC) Within five years a mild-man-nered Jesuit priest has almost singlehandedly loosened thecommunists’ grip on Italy’s most important navy arsenelhere and broken their 14-year-old domination of the town’scommunal and provincial governments.

He is Rev. Giuseppe Bocca-

damo, S.J., a small, soft-spokenpriest who came to Taranto in1953 at the request of the Na-tional Organization for Religiousand Moral Assistance to Workers.

FATHER BOCCADAMO re-

calls: “For two years, without

ever officially entering the ar-

senal, I approached each worker

individually, seeking him out inhis home and making contact withhis family. I sought them out inthe hospitals and clinics when

they were sick.

“I took an interest in their

family needs and in their chil-

dren. In the evenings I metwith them in their parishes in

Taranto and in the surround-

ing villages.Little by little theybegan to know me and be

friendly.”It was the workers themselves

who asked that Father Boccadamo

be admitted to the arsenal as

their chaplain. Arsenal directors

not only gave such permission,but also supplied him with an of-fice, a secretary, a car and achauffeur.

The workers built a beautiful

chapel out of factory scraps.Bronze altar and tabernacle, can-

dlesticks, kneelers, even a hand-

wrought ailver chalice and a cib-orium were all madd by the work,

ers.

The priest'* work load in-

creased rapidly and he was com-

pelled to ask for assistants to helpmake home contacts outside thearsenal. A dozen specially trainedworkers were supplied to him.

WHEN HE ARRIVED in Tar-anto in 1953, the internal com-

mission (union representatives in-side the shops) of the arsenal was

divided: communist union, 26;Christian Democratic union,three; others, one. After the shopelections of May, 1956, the in-ternal commission was divided:Christian Democrats, 16; commu-

nists, 11, othett, three. "Hie Chris-tian Democratic labor union,which in 1953 had 800 card car-

riers, today has more than 4,000' A year after the elections,what had happened inside thearsenal was reflected on theoutside. Communist dominationof local politics, which theReds had held since 1944, was

completely broken in the May,1957, elections.In 1953 the local pastors be-

wailed the absence of men in thechurches and in parochial activi-ties. Today many men are at Sun-day Masses; participation in Cath-olic Action activities is flourish-

ing; the Apostleship of Prayer, or-

ganized by Father Boccadamo in-side the arsenal, numbers 2,200members with 62 leaders.

The civilian personnel entrust-ed to Father Boccadamo’s care isabout 13,000, employed in four

principal establishments, the larg-est of which is the Navy Arsenal.

At the arsenal there are about

8,000 civilians. It is a city morethan a military base, coveringabout 3,700 acres. Whoever can

influence the thinking and con-duct of the personnel inside thearsenal, exerts an influence on

the city, the environs and even,in some measure, a great sectionof southern Italy.

FATHER BOCCADAMO’S daybegins at 6:30 a.m. as he entersthe arsenal and goes to his officeto hear confessions. He celebratesMass at 7 for the workers whomust be in the shops at 7:45.From 8 to 9 he receives the work-ers who call at his office.

He makes the rounds of thevarious shops from 9 to 12:30.From 3:30 to 4:30 he teaches re-

ligion in the apprentice and tech-nical schools on the arsenal

grounds. Back in his office at4:30, he handles correspondenceand requests for various kinds ofassistance up until 6 p.m.

In the evenings he goes to

one or another of the outlyingvillages to conduct variousclasses and meetings or visitsthe sick and the workers' fam-ilies.

To combat communism on ideo-

logical grounds, Father Bocca-damo has started two circulatinglibraries. To provide for the com-

bined social and religious needs

of the workers’ children, he has

organized summer camps at theseaside and in the mountains.

Communists for a while suc-

ceeded in opposing Father Boc-cadamo by means of lunch-hour

rallies and meetings. So Father

Boccadamo organized a soccer

league and lunch hours are spentin practice or in league games.

Father Boccadamo organized a

55-piece orchestra and chorus

among the workers. Periodicallyhe arranges pilgrimages and toursfor the workers’ families. So far

he has held two four-day spiritualretreats and 11 overnight week-end retreats.

TWO YEARS AGO, during thediocesan EuchSristic Congress in

Taranto, Cardinal Tisserant cele-brated Mass inside the arsenaland 4,000 received Communion,many of whom had not been tothe sacraments in 20 or 30 years.

Since then more than a thou-

sand crucifixes have been made

by the workers and have been

placed in every shop and office

on the base. These replace thecrucifixes which were gatheredup in 1945 and thrown into the

sea.

Pope Says Church

Is Friend of ArtNCW'C News Service

Following it a Iranslaliom ofan address delivered in French

on Apr. 30, 1958, to an audience of student! and director! of theFrench Academy of Fine Art! of Rome hy Pnpe Pita XII. ThePope said that the limits placed nn religious art hy the Churchhate proven a helpful discipline and

source of inspiration to

artists.

We are always glad to receive the pensioners of theFrench Academy I of Fine Arts 1 of Rome

They have entered into the life of the Eternal Citywhich is so important in the realm of the fine arts and hasbeen a source of perpetual renewal to artists of all placesand all times.

You are brought together with-

in the noble walls of the Villa

Medici by a common investiga-tion into beauty in all its forms,harmonies, colors, lines, masses,and proportion*.And it appearsto U* that youfollow together

yet each in

his own waythe same medi-

tation on the

mysterious re-

lations between

spirit and mat-

ter. seeking in

parallel ways to express yoursouls and the entire world bymeans of the art you cultivate.

WK ENOW of the brotherlyrivalry which has always existedamong the arts and the schools,and the endless but fruitful dis-

cussions stimulated by theoriesand works. And you know that

the church has always been gra-cious toward art and artists.

Although she has presentedto their talent and taste rertatn

carefully defined conditions j

imposed by the nsture of theservice expected of them in theexaltation of worship and the

pomp of the liturgy, historyshows that the greatest artistshave found in the Church a

wholesome discipline and a

subject of highest inspirationIt ia Our hope that there are

many among you who will findthe opportunity to dedicate their

God-given talents to His honor in

a special way.

It is always difficult for mento rise from the sensible to thespiritual, to be lifted from an

imperfect beauty to Beauty parexcellence. Those to whom Godhas granted this essential giftshould give thanks for it, andstrive to aid their brothers in

humanity to find the Creator inHu creatures.

Such Is Our hope. And that it

may come to pass with gracefrom on, high, We. with full

heart, grant you, your children

present here, your families andall those whom you recomme.nl

to Our prayers, Our ApostolicBlessing. . j

Father Perkins

To Be OrdainedIn WilmingtonRAMSEY Rev. William R.

Perkins, son of Mr. and Mrs.R. H. Perkins, 104 Church St., willbe ordained May 31 in St. Peter’s

Cathedral, Wilmington, Del, byBishop Edward J. Schlotterbach,0.5.F.5., of Keetmanshoop,Southwest Africa.

A convert while attending East-side High School, Paterson, Fa-ther Perkins attended publicschools in Paterson and Ramsey,Seton Hall Prep and University.

After working for some year*as a chemist, he entered St. Ma-

ry’s Seminary, Baltimore, wherehe received the degree of Licen-tiate in Theology.

Father Perkins will celebratehis first Solemn Mass at 10:15a m. June 1 in St. Paul’s Church,Ramsey. The archpriest will beRev. Lester A. Quinn, pastor.Deacon and subdeacon will beRev. Edward Duffy, Our Ladyof Mercy, Park Ridge. Rev.James J. Donnelly, St. George’s,Paterson, will preach the sermon.

Minor ministers will includeFrancis Podgorski. William Mar-

schalk, Andrew Lapica. John Cor-bett and James Corbett.

Benedictine Monk

Becomes a BaronWELLINGBOROUGH. England

Rev. Peter Gabriel Gilbey,0.5.8., has become Eighth RaronVaux of Harrowden, a title hecannot renounce, and is now en-

titled to a seat in the House ofLords, an honor he may refuse.

Whether he does take his seat

or not is up to his ecclesiasticalsuperiors. The title itself oecamehis on the death of hu mother

CATHOLICS ARE obliged to

contribute to the support of theirparish.

German TheologiansUphold A-Weapons

BERLIN (RNS)—Seven prominent West German Cath-olic theologians issued a 10-point declaration upholding the

right of a state to use atomic weapons if this becomes neces-

sary for its defense.

The statement stressed, however, that in view of thedevastating effects of atomic

weapons a state must be pre-

pared to make big sacrifices for

the preservation of peace.It skid this must even include

renouncing the right to defend

unquestionable frontier rights,yielding on economic issues, or

sacrificing some national inter-

ests.

SIGNERS OF the statement

were: Fathers Alfons Auer andHeinz Fleckenstein of Wuerzburg;Richard Egenter and Nikolaus

Monzel of Munich; Johannes

Hirschmann of Frankfurt; JosephHoeffner of Muenster; and Eber-

hard Welty of Walderberg. All

occupy chairs of moral-theology.

Obviously referring to West

Germany’s membership in

NATO, the declaration said

that if a state belongs to a de-

fense system and fulfills the

resulting obligations, includingappropriate armament, “it does

nothing but fulfill its duty to-

ward its own citizens and to-

ward the solidaric communityof peoples.’’

Although not mentioning Rus-

sia by name, the declaration em-

phasized that peace in today’sworld is endangered by the ex-

istence of a highly modern-armed

power which regards the victoryof its atheistic ideology as a nec-

essary consequence of historyand the employment of all avail-

able means to implement and ac-

celerate its objectives as basic-ally lawful.

The statement said that pre-paredness against this power ap-

pears justified so long as it failsto remove the cause of such pre-cautions.

The Catholic theologians saidthat the best method for safe-

guarding peace is a general and

controlled disarmament.

They noted that although the

objectives of a Christian peace

policy are clear, differences of

opinion on their implementationare thoroughlyChristians. They said this is par-

ticularly true in regard to assess-

ing the actual degree of dangerand in deciding whether certain

measures would reduce or In-

crease the risk of war.

Acting OrdinaryOusted in ChinaROME (NC) Conventual

Franciscans stated at their head-

quarters here that they have re-

ceived . wprd that the Chinesecommunist government has oust-ed the acting Prefect Apostolicof Hinganfu in Shensi province.

The Hingafu prefecture apos-

tolic, erected in 1928, is entrusted

to the Conventual Fathers. Its

Prefect Apostolic, Rev. Pietro

Maleddu, O.F.M. Conv., jailed bythe Reds and later expelled, is

now living in Italy.

JUBILARIAN: Rev. An-

thony J. Dziurzynski, pas-tor of St. Joseph’s, Passaic,is the only priest in the

Diocese of Paterson ob-

serving his silver jubileethis year. He was ordainedJune 10, 1933. Formal ob-

servance of the jubilee will

take place June 1.

6 THE ADVOCATE Mty 24,1958

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NAME

ADDRESS

CITYSTATE,

2Hudson County MenAwait Ordinations

0Be

E ’ Pa - ~ Tvvo theology students of St. Vin-

hood 3? Cmmary h6re WUI be ordained t 0 the Priest-

Rti?V ' T' Pa g ano of Kearny will be ordained in

Wilmington, Del. Rev. Luciano ’A.V a,rm ot Jersey City will receiveHoly Orders in St. Matthew’sCathedral, Washington.

FATHER PAGANO is the sonof Mr. and Mrs. Frank Pagano112 Windsor St., Kearny. Heattended St. Cecilia’s High School,Kearny, Fordham University andSt. Vincent’s College. He enteredSt. Vincent’s Major Seminary in1953.

Father Pagano will celebratehis first Solemn Mass at noon,June 1, in St. Cecilia’s Church,Kearny, with Rev. J. M. Garvie,Church of the Assumption, Ro-selle, as assistant priest. Deaconand subdeacon will be Rev. John

Merity, St. Cecilia's and Rev.

William Hewitt of the TrentonDiocese. The sermon will be

preached by Father Ildephonse,0.5.8., St. Vincent Archabbey.Master of ceremonies will be

Christopher Plookhooney.

FATHER CAIMI is the son ofMr. and Mrs. Alexander Caimi,645 Palisade Ave., Jersey City.He attended Collegio Giusto Mor-

gando, Cuorgne, Italy; St. Peter’sCollege, Jersey City, Columbiaand Fordham Universities, priorto entering St. Vincent’s MajorSeminary.

Father Caimi will celebrate hisfirst Solemn Mass at noon, June

1, in St. Paul of the Cross

Church, Jersey City, with Msgr.James A. Hughes, Vicar General,as archpriest.

Deacon and subdeacon will beRev. James McKenna, St. Paul

of the Cross, and Rev. AnthonyMilano, 5.D.8., St. Anthony’s,Elizabeth; and Americo DiNor-

scia, St. Vincent’s Seminary, willbe master of ceremonies. The ser-mon will preached by Rev. Augus-tine Giella, Holy Trinty, Hack-ensack.

Father Pagano

India MayTax GiftsTo ReligionNEW DELHI, India (NC)

—Donations to religious insti-tutions will be taxed in the

future by India’s central

government, according tothe provisions of anew “gift tax”bill just passed by Parliament.

Several exemptions to the tax

were allowed by Finance Minister

Morarji Desal, but he turned downpleas for the exemption of giftsto religious institutions. Persons

making donations to religiouscharities, he said, would not mindpaying the tax, which ranges fromfour to 40% of the gift.

GIFT TAXATION was found

necessary, it was claimed, becausemany persons were evading thedeath duty or inheritance tax bymaking gifts to their dependentsjust before their death.

The Examiner, Bombay’s Catho-lic paper, termed the tax a “taxon charity and philanthropy.” The

paper continued by saying thatwhen a state places handicaps on

charity and good works it acts

unreasonably and encroaches onthe most sacred precincts ofhuman personality.

Catholic to Pick

UnknownSoldierWASHINGTON A Catholic

—Naval Corpsman 1/c WilliamR.Charette of Ludington, Mich.will pick the unknown servicemanof World War II who is to beentombed in Arlington National

Cemetery on Memorial Day, Mav3°. ‘

Charette will make the choicebetween two caskets during cere-monies aboard the guided missilecruiser Canberra off the. VirginiaCapes, on May 26.

Charette is the only winner ofthe Congressional Medal of Hon-

or still on active duty with theNavy. He won the award in Koreain March, 1053.

SECOND ANNUAL: Auxiliary Bishop Walter W. Curtis presided at the Communionbreakfast of the employes of Westinghouse Lamp Division, May 18 at the Hotel Subur-ban, East Orange. Here he examines the program with Agnes G. Sullivan, left, andFrank M. Hughes. Standing, left to right,Richard Lynch, Florence Mathern, Albert

J. Leon, and Mayor Donald H. Scott of Bloomfield.

Japanese Thank

German FriendsCOLOGNE, Germany (RNS)

The Cbnference of Catholic Bish-

ops, in Japan has sent a messageto Cardinal Frings of the

Cologne Archdiocese for the sup-port rendered *o the Tokyo Arch-diocese.

“Such a generous help for a

mission church by an archidoceseof the Christian West is unprece-dented in history,” the messagesaid. "Full of gratitude we wantto express in a joint letter howmuch we have been impressed bythe deep understanding and theactive help of German Catholicsfor the spreading of the Epipireof God in our fatherland’’

The Cologne Archdiocese has

shown a special interest in Jap-anese Catholics. In 1954, Cologne“adopted” the Tokyo Archdiocese

and launched a program of spiri-tual and material support. Many“Tokyo Weeks” have been held

during which special collections

were taken for mission work in

Japan.Asa token of gratitude, eight

Japanese nuns of the Society ofthe Holy Heart of Jesus arrivedhee recently to help alleviate the

acute shortage of Catholic Sistersin Germany.

Will Ordain

Rahway Priest

For CamdenRAHWAY—Rev. John J. O’Sul-

livan, son of Mr. and Mrs. Pat-

rick O’Sullivan, 91 East Emer-

son Ave., will be ordained for

the Diocese of Camden on May31. The ordaining prelate will be

Bishop Justin J. McCarthy.Father O’Sullivan attended St.

.Peter’s High School, New Bruns-

wick; Seton Hall and Villanova

Universities, Augustinian College,

Washington, D.C., Catholic Uni-

versity and Mt. St. Mary’s Semi-

nary, Emmitsburg, Md. A broth-

er, Gerald F. O’Sullivan is study-ing theology for the Newark

Archdi9cese, at North American

College, Rome..

Father O'Sullivan will celebratehis first solemn Mass at noon,

June 8 in St. Mary's Church here.

The archpriest will be Rev. Fran-cis A. Sheridan of St. Mary's.Deacon and subdeacon will beRev. Francis X. Duggan, St. Se-bastian's School, Boston, Mass.,and Rev. Mr. James Ronan, Mt.

St. Mary's Seminary.Rev. Thomas B. Meaney of St.

Mary's will preach. The masterof ceremonies will be Mr. James

Forker of Mt. St. Mary's Semi-

nary.Minor ministers will include

J. E, Sutton. Patrick Weaver,Francis Burla and James Co-

man

Matthews to Receive

Holy Crons DegreeWORCESTER. Mass. - Judge

John, A. Matthews o{ South

Orange ta one of tlx jnen whowill receive honorary degreesfrom Holy Cross College here on

June 11.

Among the notablet to be hon-

ored are Gen. Allred M Green-ther, president oI the Red Cross,and Auxiliary Bishop Edward J.

Maginn of Albany.

ADDED FACILITY: Construction of this new addition to Mt. St. Andrew’s Villa,Paramus, has already started and completion is expected in a few months. De-signed by M. George Vuinovich of Englewood Cliffs, the one-story extension willcontain a new auditorium with stage, dishwashing room, coat room and other facil-ities. The existing dining room will be moved from the second to the first floor.

Wants Family Subsidies

Venezuelan Prelate ReiteratesHis Stand on Social JusticeCARACAS, Venezuefa (NC)

—One year after issuing his pas-toral criticizing the regime ofousted dictator Marcos Perez

Jimenez, Archbishop Rafael I.Arias Blanco of Caracas has

again asked for justice, housing,bread and education for the peo-

ple of Venezuela.

ADDRESSING a pastoral to the

government, to workers, and to

management, Archbishop AriasBlanco asked for legislation to

provide a minimum wage and aid

for large families.The 52-year-old prelate con-

demned those who call them-selves Catholics but violate so-

da! justice. At the same time,he stressed ttoe rights of the

poor and exhorted workers to

acquire education, specializedtraining, and to save and workwith honor.

Following his plea for more

grammar, arts and crafts schools,Archbishop Arias Blanco an-

nounced that the Church will es-

tablish radio schools in Venezu-ela similar to those now operat-ing in Colombia for the educa-tion of farmers.

The Archbishop said that "As

Catholics we cannot concede thesituation (poverty) of a largepart of our people, nor resignourselves to social injustice, nor

be satisfied with an individual-ist Christianity or with merelywelfare charity. We must pledgeourselves to remedy evil at itsroots."

SUBSIDIES granted in rela-tion to the number of childrenwould be '“of effective aid” toparents, remove the worry prev-alent among large families anddecrease the sad spectacle of

abandoned children, he said, pro-posing that they be granted onthe condition that children at-

tend school.

He also reminded the na-

tion’s rulers that labor lawsneed to be improved and thatsocial security benefits mustbe extended to governmentworkers, domestic servants andthe aged.

Speaking of farm problems, hesaid that “To attain social justiceit is indispensable that the farm

population of Venezuela be givendue consideration, and fertilelands awarded to t-hem. If eachfarm family can own the land it

tills, and if land holdings are

large enough, the farmer will notfind himself obliged to move to

the city."He recommended that the

policy of housing hundreds offamilies in large apartmenthouses be reviewed in favor of

huilding small homes for each

family.

THE ARCHBISHOP regrettedthat present urban developmentmakes no provision for parks,theaters, dispensaries, schools,“and what is even more sensi-

ble, churches.”

Following his attacks on the

causes of poverty, the prelate ex-

horted the faithful to fight what

he called the two most frequentvices of the working claim: “Al-

cohol, which has a relationshipto poverty and crime . . , and

gambling, which makes man losethe resources that his needyfamily looks to in vain.”

Explain Mass

On Radio ShowENGLEWOOD A running

commentary or a Mass will befeatured on "Threshold of Seren-

ity,”Legion of Mary program May25 at 11:05 a m. over WMTR

The commentary, recorded bythe Carmelite Fathers Guild of

Englewood, explains the historyand traditions of the actions and

prayers of the Mass

The program will be airedagain over WSOU-FM, June 2 at7:30 pm. /

Easter Coming

Calls PersecutionChurch’s Calvary

ROME (NC) The glory of the Church in the future"lies in the lands which today show the most scars," Auxil-iary Bishop Pulton J. Sheen of New York said here.

Addressing 500 priests, seminarians and nuns at thePropaganda College, he said that “Europe and the UnitedStates are the Church of the pres-ent, but Africa, Asia and Oceaniaand the nations behind the Iron

Curtain are the Church of the

future.” »

THE BISHOP, in Rome for the

annual meeting of the nationaldirectors of the Pontifical mission societiesT drew an analogybetween the sears shown byChrist after Ilia Resurrection andscars now being inflicted on theChurch

**We have had mere martyrsla the Church between I*l7 and

the present than the

first 300 years of the Christian

era," be said.

"Where is the great glory ofthe Church’" Bishop Sheen

asked "Not in the United Statesor Europe. But in those landswhich show the most scars to-

day.

"Unless there is a Good Fridayin our lives, there will be no

Easter Sunday. Those countrieswhich today are passing througha kind of Calvary and Golgothaare the glory of the Church ofthe future.”

Passionist Confraternity Plans

Anniversary Day of PrayerUNION CITY Members of the Confraternity of the

Sacred Passion of the Greater New York area will mark the

40th anniversary of its establishment in the United Stateswith an annual day of prayer and recollection May 30 atSt. Michael’s Monastery Church here.

The program will open with a

Mass. Starting at 11 a.m., the Masswill be celebrated by Bishop Cuth-bert O’Gara, Yuanling,China, preacher at the first meet-

ing of the Confraternity after it

was established at St. Michael’sin 1918. Delegates will be wel-comed by Very Rev. Caspar Con-

ley, C.P., monastery rector. The

sermon will be preached by the

Rev. Kilian McGowan, C.P., di-rector of student-priests at Our

Lady of Sorrows Monastery, West

Springfield, Mass.

AFTERNOON services begin-ning at 2 p.m. in the churchwill include a sermonette by RevColumba Moore, C.P., director ofstudents at St. Michael's; inves-titure of new members in thePassionist scapular by Rev.Richard Kugelman, C.P., confra-

ternity director, and a proces-sion to the monastery gardensfor recitation of the Way of theCross led by Rev. Leonard Mur-phy, C.P., newly-ordained priest.

Holy Hour will be observed

by members from 4 to 5 p.m.Bishop O’Gara will preach and

conclude the day-long exerciseswith Pontifical Benediction ofthe Blessed Sacrament.

The Confraternity of the Sa-cred Passion is a society of men

and women who promise to prac-

tice devotion to the Passion ofChrist. Started in Italy in 1755

by St. Paul of the Cross, founder

of the Passionist Congregation,it later was canonically estab-lished and affiliated with the Pas-

sionist Fathers. Members of the

confraternity share in the spirit-ual benefits and privileges of the

Passionists. ’

Principal obligation of the mem-

bers is personal devotion to thePassion of Our Lord and to aidthe apostolate of the PassionistFathers through prayer. Member-

ship is conferred by investiturewith the Black Scapular—a badgeof the Passionist Confraternity.

Present Charter

To RidgewoodSerra ClubRIDGEWOOD With Arch-

bishop Boland presiding and de-

livering the principal address,the Charter Night presentationbanquet of the Ridgewood Serra

Club was held May 22 at the

Hackensack Country Club.

The group was also addressedby J. Ray Jordan, vice presidentof Serra International. Peter A.

Mills, a trustee of Serra Interna-

tional, inducted the officers. Theofficial charter was presented byGeorge H. Smith, district gover-nor.

Msgr. William F. Furlong, the

archdiocesan director of voca-

tions, gave the invocation. Aloys-ius A. Norton, vice president ofthe Ridgewood Club, was masterof ceremonies and Joseph M.

Naab, general chairman.

May 24,1958 THE ADVOCATE 7

2nd ANNUAL

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An Honest Day’s WorkShakespeare said something about the evil

men do living after them while the good they do isoften buried with them. Organized labor has beenIn for a pretty rough time lately as a result of•vlla among some labor officials unearthed by1 theSenate Rackets Committee. These evils will live

a long time in the minds of those who heard andread about them. The repercussions generatedhaven't exactly produced the best in public rela-tions for union officials.

Of -course, we realize that not all labor offi-

cials are.racketeers. The majority are sincere andhonest. Unfortunately the good these latter do,If mentioned at all in the press and radio, is oftenburied where it is seen by few.

Take for instance a little item we came across

not too long ago. We’d like to pass it along toyou to prove our point about the sincerity of some

labor officials.

Richard J. Gray is president of the Buildingand Construction Trades Department, AFL-CIO.A letter from him to all building and construc-tion trades locals throughout the country is worth

telling you about.Mr. Gray suggested that the members of his

union atop blocking the use of labor-saving devices

on the job. He also condemned such well known

maneuvers as slowdowns, forcing of overtime,

spread-work tactics, standby crews and feather-bedding.

In explaining this new policy, Mr. Gray said

that he believes that now is the time for labor to

give “an honest day’s work for a day’s pay.”The object of the new policy is, of course, to

cut the cost of construction, thereby giving indus-

try an incentive to expand their plants, allowingdevelopers to put up more commercial buildings,and make it possible for more peopld to buyhomes. The end result means more and longerjobs for the building and construction union mem-

bers.

If the locals adopt this national policy, and,more important, if this policy spreads to other

unions, the labor movement will accomplish some-

thing that will sweeten the public’s had tasteresulting from some of the testimony—and lack

of it—before the McClellan committee.

Mr. Gray is to be commended for his letter.This type of thinking among labor officials willwin friends and influence people. It should be

given much better coverage in the press.However, it might be pointed out, that giving

“an honest day’s work for a day’s pay” is a prin-ciple of justice that should be practiced, not onlyduring times of recession to stimulate more labor

opportunities, but during times of plenty as well.

Splendor Remembereds i Memorial Day began as a day to decorate the

graves of those who fell in the war which setSouth against North. By an oddity of history, the

day was first kept while the war still raged' in

aome of the Southern states but, when the war

ended, *it became an exclusively Northernobservance.

OUr country was dazed by the disasters ofthat war. The bitterness of the years which led upto the open break, the extremes of devastation inthe armies’ paths and, worst of all, the unbe-

lievable losses in human life—all these left thenation reeling. It was not our first war, but itwas our first “modern" war; the firlt time that

weapons of such murderous efficiency hsd beenturned against fragile flesh. And every casualtywas an American casualty.

But there was also a dimly seen consolationunder all the tragedy. Americans knew that theyhad survived a grueling test and also that theyhad been in the presence of a kind of holiness.

Men had volunteered and died by thousands.Conscripts had fulfilled the mission thrust uponthem with a fervor that astonished the world.Blue and Gray alike stormed into the fury of fireand lead for the sake of an ideal. Whether rightor wrohg, whether the war could have been avoid-ed or not, there was an* irreducible core of hero-

ism, Not for the advantage of the moment, notfor money, not for lust, thousands of young men

put themselves between their country snd whatthey conceived to be a threat against it. Bothsides could not be right and, in a sense, perhapsneither was, but both were defended gallsntly.

As new wars oppress us, Memorial Day is a

day to venerate the memory and to decorate thegraves of all the fallen.

This is a healthy practice. When war mad-dens men, heroism becomes so commonplace thatonly the most dramatic achievements rate a men-tion in dispatches or an exceptional medal. Whatwould make screaming headlines in peacetime is

no more than a soldier’s duty.Now civic life in a country where the citi-

zens rule themselves demands profound civic vir-tue. Our nation would be a better place if our

public life were marked by the spirit of sacrifice,of daring, of devotion, that marked our battle-fields. If the “smoke-filled hotel rooms” had a

little more of the urgency for the common safetythat marked councils of war on the eve of battle,politics would be a cleaner occupation.

Perhaps what we need most is understanding—the perception to see thatt adventure and dutyand courage are not limited to the cavalry chargeor the bombing run, not at home only under hel-met and shoulder straps. These are also the vir-tues of the citizen. How could we forget that oursoldiers are also our citizens? That the ballot boxand the Congress town meeting and school board,have at least as much to do with the commonwAl

as do the grim decisions of strategy and tactics.Our war dead are, as it were, cousins not too farremoved from martyrs. A lot of our people are

among them. Our plafe in the American scene

owes more than a little to young Catholic soldierswho showed the non-Catholic majority that the

man who loves God can die for country too.

Whitsunday Amid the ClichesOne runs th* risk of understatement in ob-

serving that th* typical citizen of the modernworld is not theologically conditioned. One de-tects no noticeable influence of the truths of

Christian revelation on his thought, art, or

morals. Someone has in fact described our ageaa the post-Christian era. In “America as a Civil-isation" Max Lerner describes, the "type”: he is‘SMomriitlr mad mat othar-worldty , . , ffte ob-

jects of his ambition are secular rather than,sacred. He believes in whatever can be touched,grasped, measured

...not too finicky in hissexual life

.. .

it is not salvation he is after, nor

virtue, nor saintliness ...He is an amoral man

•f energy, mastery and power . . . breaking thetaboos against knowledge and experience, evenat the cost of his soul." (p. 63).

Him you will not find in church on Pente-cost Sunday. You will find his opinions on men.morals and salvation in press columns, books, andplays any day. They will be expressed in termsof sociology and psychology. He will drop pon-derously such words as "emotional drives," "sub-limation,” and "father-image." You will get thefeeling that he is unsure of all but himself.

He give* the impression thst he hsi demol-ished the argument* (or the Church with theword “authoritarian.’' Pentecost should remindus, it it does not remind him, that there is a vastdifference between the concept of authority andthe concept of authoritarianism. It would do bothhim and us good to ponder the nature, function,ana necessity of religious authority.

The authority of the Church is essentiallylinked to the mission of Jesus. The meaning ofJosus as teacher is that he brings a message fromGod that Is bound up with human destiny The•Urvivsl of his message depends upon the exist-

enc* of the Church. It is of the essence of theChurch that it enjoy the assistance of the divineSpirit in the exercise of its mission. Submissionto Church authority is consequently not a blind al-

legiance bat a reasoned obedience founded on a

larger vision of reality.We hear much these days about "together-

ness" and "the sense of belonging." One is ,notintolerant of fashions In words, If he inquires asto the substance behind them. Paul the Apostlewas creative with words. There was substance be-hind them. Pentecost reminds us of the substancebehind one of them, the word “body.” Pa#tl de-scribed the Church as the “body" of Christ Theliving principle of the body’s unity is the HolySpirit according to the dictum of St. Augustine,"What the soul is in our body, that is the HolySpirit in Christ’s body, the Church.” If we likefashions in words, we may speak of the Church

as "community," or speak of ourselves as “be-

longing,” never forgetting, nowever, the sub-stance of religious reality behind them.

One could scarcely describe the present tem-per of our world as "pptimism.” One must de-scribe the perennial temper of Christianity as

"optimism." This is another timely truth thatPentecost brings home to us. Jesus promised theParaclete—the Consoler—to abide with us evento the consummation of the world. Christians are

no hspjrter than the rest of men at the prospectof the possible end of our world. Our optimismis not founded on the duration of this world, but

on the duration of the next. Such pessimism thatis ours is rooted in the belief that moral evil will

bring about the end of our world sooner than

intercontinental missiles. Pentecost reminds usthat there is only one remedy for moral evil,grace and the Spirit of God.

Cyrus Eaton vs. the FBIOn a recent national broadcast Cyrus S

laton, the Cleveland industrialist, blasted the

s*-I- «nd the work of J. Edgar Hoover, itsdirector. Mr. Eaton, who has risen in Americato the heights of industry and has accumulateda .sizeable fortune, perhaps feels that any obser-vation he makes on any subject is worthy ofacceptance. It is hard for the average Americanto reconcile the chargea of Mr. Eaton with theMark realities of the day. It is also strange thatsuch criticism by Mr Eaton should follow so

dosely on the publication of Mr Hoover s recentbook "Masters of Deceit." In thst book MrHoover carefully and sedulously analyses the•ver present threat of communism and againwarn* the nation of the International conspiracy

which is ever st work in the world and parttcu-Urly in our own country.

Prescinding from the fatuous observation ofthe industrialist, who is there in America whodoes not realise that the first line of internaldefense is* the Federal Bureau of Investigation?Who is there in America who does not realizethat in the midst df its various activities, whichare multiple, the F.8.1. has been defending theheart of America from the using crime wavewhich is shocking its citizens. Mr Eaton naimcdthat the work of the F.8.1 was "enormopslyexaggerated." If we consider only one small areaof the work of the F B 1,, that is, its protectionof America from communiatic infiltration andsubversion, and if we consider the inherent evilof communism, especially in view of the advanceswhich communism haa made in the last 10 years,can anyone say intelligently that the work of theF B I, has been “enormously exaggerated?"

If there is one evil which nancrept into ourAmerican society it is the national apathy regard-ing the evil of communism No matter how muchis written or said about the evils of communism,no matter how much our people are warned of its

corrupting influence, po matter how much our

way of life i« in dinger, by its growth, there arestill too many Americans who manifest a complete•pathy and indifference to the 4ro*lh of Commun-ism

Could it be that Mr Eaton Is annoyed thatthe FB I in its loyal and devoted operation hasbeen an obstacle to the industrialist's dream ofpeaceful and economic coexistence with Soviet 1Russia Could it that Mr. -Eaton would bewilling to sacrifice the Godgiven rtghts which theAmerican people enjoy for an extension of eco-nomic trade with Soviet Russia*

Mr Eaton said that he knew of no Kussianwho thought that communism could prevail in

the United States. Perhaps it would be well ifMr Eaton asked some of his Russian friendswhether or not they thought that communismcould prevail in Poland, In Hungary, in Checho-slovakia. in Latvia, in China. Such lUtementaleava a thoughtful American frightened and aiartrd; frightened that such an American could hethat naive and alerted to the danger that Russianpropaganda can win convert*.

Communist Opium

Treatment for TouristsBy Louis Francis Budenz

Confident that appeasers withinour own country are strongenough to muddy the waters ofAmerican public opinion andprevent us from taking any de-cisive counteraction, the Kremlinhas embarked

upon a programof belittling the

United States

throughout theworld.

Three weeks

ago I pointedout that Moscow

waa treating us

as though we

were a nation

of political sim-

pletons. That is the precise term

applied to those representing the

U; S. government in other lands

by the New JTimes of Moscow forMarch. “American SimpletonsAbroad” is the title for an articleof directives advising Red agentshow to instigate non-commuriistsin other countries to harass andheckle Americans.

THE KREMLIN organ beginsits directives with these words:“Americans visitingEurope. Asia,Africa and Latin America are

coming to realize more and more

that public opinion in many coun-

tries is against them. They are’greeted with insulting signs on]the walls and are asked questionsthey find rather difficult to

answer, on the position of Ne-

groes and Indians in the United

States, growing unemployment,war hysteria and many other un-

pleasant aspects of the so-called

American way of life."

Experience with .communisttechniques teaches us that the

statement of what is takingplace In this instance is not

only a statement of what thecommunists are doing, but ofwhat they want done.

That this belittlement. of the

United States, is part and parcelof a larger program of renewed jRed infiltration in every countryis sharply pointed out by Inter !national Affairs, coming here re-jcently from Moscow. That publi-cation contains an article, “Pro- jletarian Internationalism in jWorld Relations,” which is a re-

statement of the loyalty owed bycommunist-minded people to Mos- jcow.

TO PROVIDE the proper set-

Unit for the discussion, “Prole-

tarian Internationalism" is defin-

ed as "the manifestation of the

unity of interest of the workers

of all countries in their struggle

against their common enemy,

capitalism, their singleness of

purpose to build socialism and

communism and the unity of thc|rclass consciousness and their

socialist ideology ...” '

In everyday language, these

words stress the loyalty which

every “worker" ewes to the

"land of socialism.'* and in-

deed the article goes on to

proclaim that “class conscious

workers in all countries found

a socialist fatherland in the

first Soviet socialist state."

Today that loyalty goes even

beyond the Soviet Union and cm

braces "the Chinese People’s Re

public and other socialist coun-

tries." This requires anew in-

filtration by th» communists in

all countries, “especially those

which are threatened with Ameri-

can expansion or have already be-

come victims of it."

Even the Reds in the UnitedStates report that things are look-

ing up for them in their abilityto influence American thinking.The Worker of May 11 bubbles

over with reports of Red suc-

cesses.

It notes that “May Day RalliesReflect Resurging Enthusiasm”in all parts of the country, thatthere is real oppression againstthe “McCarthyite move” to curbthe Supreme Court, that com-munist spokesmen are being in-

creasingly welcomed on the cam-

puses of the nation, and that theSoviet ambassador, “at the invita-tion of Cyrus Eaton, mid-Westfinanceer,” went to Clevelandwhere he was welcomed by 60

key financial and industrial lead-

ers of the Mid-Western area.

THE PUBLICATION is thrilledat the sweeping assault on th«FBI by Cyrus Eaton, given overthe American Broadcasting Sys-tem. When we note what enthus-iasm Mr. Eaton's words bring tothe Reds, in declaring that theFBI is worse in its methods than

Hitler’s gestapo, we get a clue

to the contempt which Moscowhas for our ability to stand upagainst Soviet aggression.

Unless large sections of theAmerican press, television, andother agencies cease their sur-

render to appeasement, we areabout to witness episode after

episode repeating in some formwhat happened to the Vice Pres-ident.

The Faith in Focus

No Whittling Down

By Msgr. George W. Shea, S.T.D.Rebelling against divine re-

velation, perhaps a majority ofProtestant churches now scoff atthe idea of Hell, or at least ofan eternal Hell. But, faithful toher mission of proclaiming all ofChrist’s teachings —• the hard

sayings as well as the pleasantones the Catholic Church con-tinues to uphold, as a truth offaith which may not be question-ed without heresy, the doctrineof eternal punishment for thosewho die in mortal sin.

"Preaching about Hell,” PopePius Xll declared not many yearsago, “has become more needfuland more urgent than ever. . .

As to the substance of this truth,the Church has the sacred duty,before God and man, of proclaim-ing it. of teaching it without anywhittling down, as Christ reveal-ed it” (Address, Mar. 23, 1949)

Hence the Revised BaltimoreCatechism does not hesitate toput the unvarnished truth aboutHell right on the line: “Those are

punished in hell who die in mortal

sin; they are deprived of thevision of God and suffer dreadful

torments, especially that of fire,for all eternity.”

From the dozens of Biblical

passages which support this doc-trine we may single opt thesentence which Our Lord will

pass on sinners at the Last Judg-ment: “Depart from me, ac-cursed ones, into the everlastingfire which was prepared for thedevil and his angels" (Matthew25, 41).

The first words, "depart from

roe," express the heaviest punish-ment with which the wicked willbe visited, their eternal banish-ment from the tight of God. This

privation of the beatific vision israiled the pain of loss. That this

pain does in fact outweigh all theother punishments of Hell will bebetter understood after we have

spoken, on a later occasion, ofHeaven.

The further words, "into the

everlasting fire.,,

*

> refer to an-

other sort of punishment, calledthe pain of sense It ia a tormentinflicted by created means on the

soul, and on the body after its

resurrection.

| Since the Scriptnm speak so

often of the fire of Hell to whichthe damned are consigned, it is

certain that the pain of sense is

brought about by real fire, even

though we do not know just howsuch fire can affect spiritualsouls, or whether it is the same

type of fire we have on earth.

It would be rash, therefore, tohold that the fire of Hell may beunderstood figuratively, as thoughit were a symbol for purely spiri-tual pains, suqh as remorse ofconscience. The language ofScripture, about fire as an instru-ment of punishment in Hell, mustbe taken literally unless somevalid reason can be advanced tothe contrary. No such reason canbe shown, and the figurativesense seems to be altogether ex-cluded by Our Lord's wordswhich we have quoted as indicat-ing the distinction between the

pain of loss and the pain of sense.The wicked are to depart into thefire “which was prepared for thedevil and his angels." No one candepart into the remorse which hecarries about in himself, nor wasthat remorse prepared for some-

one else it is purely personal.The company of the wicked de-

mons, “the devil and his angels,”will constitute another of themiseries and sufferings of Hell.

In Your Prayers

remember these- your deceased

priests:

Archdiocese of ISetcarkRev. Edward J. Budrawict, May

24. 1934

Rev. James V. Fitzpatrick.May 24. 1946

Rev. George W. Corrigan, May25, 1915

Rev. Raymond Maggiore, May26. 1931

Rev. Charles P. Gillen. .May27, 1915

Rev. James M. McCormick.May 29. 1903

Rev. Henry B. Lynch. May29. 1919

Rev. James A. Lundy, May

SO. 1936

THE QEUSTION BOXMost Rev. Walter W. Curtis, Immaculate Conception \c*

inary, Darlington, Ramsay, P, 0., is editor of The Question Bet

Questions may be submitted to him for answer in this column.

Q. Should a Catholic, even

though an adult, attend a pub-lic showing of the picture“Mom and Dad"?

R. The following answer was

prepared by Father Paul Hayes,assistant director of the Newark

Archdiocssan Office for Decent

Literature and Decent Motion

Pictures. To him and to his staff

we express our appreciation.The motion picture “Mom and

Dad” is one of the so-called sex

instruction films, which under

the sponsorship of Hygienic Pro-

ductions was condemned over 10

years ago by the National Le-

gion of Decency. At the time that

this condemnation was made pub-lic the following objection was

voiced by the Legion of Decency:“This film deals with a subject

most objectionable for presenta-tion in entertainment motion pic-ture theaters. Moreover, the

treatment of the subject as pre-sented in the film is most objec-tionable for entertainment motion

picture audiences. It ignores com-

pletely essential and supernatu-ral values associated with ques-tions of this nature."

Necessary sex instruction is

primarily the responsibility of

parents, who in the exercise of

this responsibility should be guid-ed by physicians and priests, in

giving prudent and timely in-struction to their children. True

psychology and sound moralitywill insist on common-sense pre-cautions. This instruction should

be given to the individual, ratherthan to groups, and certainly notto mixed groups of young people.In addition, we must recall that

the motion picture theater rep-resents a mass medium of com-

munication and entertainment.As such, it is not the place to

present sex instruction.

Relative to this subject, thelate Pope Pius XI in his encycli-cal on the Christian Education

of Youth, wrote as follows:

“Another very grave danger isthat naturalism which nowadaysinvades the field of education in

thatimost delicate matter of pur-ity of morals. Far too common

is the error of those who with

dangerous assurance, and under

an ugly term, propagate a so-called sex-education, falsely im-

agining they can forearm youthagainst the dangers of sensualityby means purely natural, such

as a foolhardy initiation and pre-

cautionary instruction for all in-

discriminately, even in public."It is certainly the feeling of

our, Holy Father, as well as the

National Legion of Decency, thatthe presentation of sex instruc-

tion through the mass medidmof the entertainment theater isto be frowned upon to say theleast. The Legion of Decency,views-with grave concern motion

pictures, both past and present,of so-called sex hygiene films inentertainment motion picture the-

aters. Normal people burdenedwith the cares and troubles oflife attend the motion picture the-ater primarily to relax and be

entertained. They are in searchof legitimate pleasure and whole-some entertainment.

The motion picture theater is

not a doctor’s office or a class-

room; it is not the consultation

room of a minister of religion; itis not the sanctuary of the home.

As far back as Sept. 8, 1941,Bishop John T. McNichols, thenthe chairman of the EpiscopalCommittee on Motion Pictures,summed up the attitude of theLegion of Decency relative to allfilms of this type when he said,“Sex instruction does not come

within the function of the motion

picture theater. On the contrary,to assume this grave responsibil-ity would be a perversion of the

principal function of the theater.Instead of rendering any realservice to the public welfare, theinfluence thus exercised must be

progressively degenerating in themoral order.”

Obviously, it is the feeling of

thinking people and certainly ofthose in authority to speak in thefield of motion pictures, that the

general principle is true, that seflinstruction films of any sorflshould not find a place in thfl

public theater. In addition, thflfilm "Mom and Dad” has.beeiflaccompanied by questionable adlvertising and promotional meth-lods. Moreover, this movie far!from being a restrained instruc-ltional film on the subject, con-1tains many morally objectionable!features because of which H has!been condemned by the Legion!of Decency. As such it certainlyshould not be viewed by anyCatholic.

Q. Please tell me who con-

secrated Archbishop Boland.

A. The Archbishop was conse-

crated in Sacred Heart Cathe-

dral, Newark, on Thursday, July25, 1940. The consecrator was

Archbishop Thomas JosephWalsh and the Bishops who were

the assistant consecrators were

Bishop Bartholomew Joseph Eu-

stace of Camden, and Bishop Wil-

liam Aloysius Griffin of Trenton.

Q. How long does an ordina-

tion .ceremony last? .1 .have

been told it is too long for me

to attend at my age.

A. The ceremony at which men

are ordained priests lasts about

2Vi hours. To this would have to

be added travel time to the placeof ordination.

I would say that your conditionof health ought to be taken into

account in determining if this

ceremony would be too long for

you. Not everyone can bear upwell under a long affair. In this

only those who know you well

can give you the best advice.

WANTED: A reader wishes

to locate a convent that hand

makes lace or that can repaira Cluny lace dress.

Forty Hours

Archdiocese of Newark

May 11. HIS

Pentacost Sunday

Blaaacd Sacrament. Clinton Ava.

Van Ness PI,. Newark

Holy Trinity. 107 Adams St.. NewarkSt. Aloyslus, 11# Bloomfield Ave.«

, Caldwell

St. Joseph’s. 40 Sprlnf St.. Lodi

Our Lady Queen of Peace, 10 Frank-

lin PL. North ArlingtonHoly Spirit, 7S Mam St., OranfoSt. Mary’s. SIS W. Sth St.. PlainfieldOur Lady of Sorrows. 117 Prospect

St., South OranaeSt. Michael’s. 1211 Kelly St.. UnionSt. Andrew's. 7# Washington Ave..Westwood

June 1, less

Trinity SundayGuardian Ansel. Franklin Turnpike,

Allendale

Little Flower. 310. Plainfield Ava ,Berkeley Helshts

St. Peter the Apostle. US Fifth A is..River Edge

St. Joseph’s. 1300 Central Ave.. Union

CitySt. Cession's. 187 Bellevue Ave . Up-

per Montclair

Diocese of Paterson

May 11, m#Pentecost Sunday

St. Joseph. W. Main St.. MendhamSt. Thomas of Aquln, 33 Railroad

Ave.. Ogdensburs

June 1, mi

Trinity SundaySt. Francis Health Resort. DenvllleSt. Anthony, 138 BeechSt., Paterson

Mass. CalendarMay 35 Sunday. Pentecost Sunday.

Double of lit Class. Red. Gl. Sequence.Cr. Pref,, Communicantes and Hans

rcitur of Pentecost.' May 36 Monday. Monday within

Octave of Pentecost. Double of Ist Class.

Red. Gl. Sequence. Cr. Pref. etc. of

Pentecost.May 37 Tuesday. Tuesday within

Octave of Pentecost. Double of Ist Class.

Red. Gl. Sequence. Cr. Pref. etc., of

Pentecost.May 28 Wednesday. Ember Wednes-

day within Octave of Pentecost. Double.Red. Gl. Sequence. Cr. Pref. etc., of

Pentecost.

May 28 Thursday. Thursday withinOctave of Pentecost. Double. Red. Gl.

Sequence. Cr. Pref. etc., of Pentecost.May 30 Friday. Ember Friday with-

in Octave of Pentecost. Double. Red.Gl. Sequence. Cr. Pref. etc., of Pente-

cost.May 31 Saturday. Ember Saturday

within Octave of Pentecost. Double.

Red. Gl. Sequence. Cr. Pref. etc., of

Pentecost.

June 1 Sunday. The Most Holy

Trinity (also. First Sunday after Pente-

coet.). Double of Ist Class. White Gl.2nd Coll, of the First Sunday. Cr. Pref.of Trinity.

KEY: Gl. Gloria: Cr. Creed: A for

Peace: B for Pope: N Archdiocese of

Newark; P Diocese of Paterson: Coll.Collect; Pref. etc.. Preface, Communl-

cantos and Hanc Iritur of Pentecost.

AROUND THE PARISH

Mrs. O'Brian finds that Mary’s story tailing doesn’tput Stevie to sleep as she had hoped-he keeps calling

for more!

8

■ 7% 4

AtvcfealeOfficial Publication ot 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 Advocste PublishingCorporation, Most Rev Thome* A Boland ST D

,

President; Rt. Rev Msgr James A. Hughe*. P A,

F.C.D., V.G., Vice President Rt ReV Msgr JamesPv Looney, AM. Secretary Rt Rev Msgr CaesarM. Rinaldi and Rt Rev M»gr. Paul Knappek, P ATrustees, Si Clinton St, Newark 4 N J MArket♦•TOO

Member of the Catholic Press AssociationSubscriber to the N.C.W C News Serv ice

Editorial Board. Most Rev Martin W Stanton.S TD, Ph.D.; Moat Rev Walter W Curtis. sT D;ML Rev Msgr. WUliam F. Lawtor, PA, LLD-MJC; Rt Rev. Magr WUiiam C. Hairebuch, Rt!Mev. Msgr. Joseph H. Brady. STD, Ph D ; VeryMS* Magr. John J. Dougherty STL., S.S.D,Wary Rev. Magr George W Shea S TD, Very Rev.

M«gr. Jobe J Riley, Rev Thomas M Reardon,ULB.; Rev. James W O'Nelli, Rev WUiiam N.field; Rev. Edward A Synan, Ph D

Pateraon RepreaenUUve Rev Carl J. Wolsia.Maeaging Editor, Floyd Anderson.

THE ADVOCATE May 24,1958

GREETINGS: Pope Pius XII stops to chat with Auxili-ary Bishop Fulton J. Sheen of New York during a

general audience granted to national directors of theSociety for the Propagation of the Faith.

Foreign Aid

Need Social JusticeIn World Community

By Eleanor WatersMiss H alers is committee secretary of the Catholic Association

for International Peace and is substituting for Msgr. George CHiggins this week.

Social Order, monthly maga-zine published by the Jesuit In-stitute of Social Order, St. Louis,devotes its May issue to an inter-national symposium on “Dutiesto Underdeveloped Countries.” Inthe light of the current discus-sions of U.S. foreign aid, we are

indebted to this periodical for a

thoughtful presentation of a com-

plex problem.The main argument in Social

Order’s symposium is presented

by Rev. Leon H. Janssen, S.J,, a

specialist in the economics of un-

derdeveloped countries. The restof the forum is devoted to brief

commentaries on the basic pa-per, contributed by 11 experts,with a final summary by the edi-tor. The short pieces reveal a

wide divergence of opinion as tothe manner in which assistancecan be given to underdevelopedareas. At the same time, thereIs general agreement on the mor-

al necessity of aiding these coun-

tries. .

FATHER JANSSEN begins byrecalling the changes in indus-

trial relations which graduallydeveloped after the Industrial

Revolution, and which finally ledto an awareness of social justice,which, he says, “was the fruit of

« conviction that somethingshould and could be done to giveevery member of the communitythe opportunity to lead a fullyhuman life.” This conviction gaverise to the development of tradeunions and social legislation, andthus “within such a framework

industrial relations were raisedfrom the law of the jungle to thelevel of a community concern.”

Today the complicated prob-lems of the international com-

munity weigh upon us all, andhere again the crying need isfor social justice. Father Jans-

sen writes: “The awareness of

relationships of justice govern-

ing the International communi-

ty Is today as primitive as

was the moral mood of the 19th

century’s view of industrial re-

lations.”

There is, of course, an inter-

national community, but its ac-

tions are dominated by power

rather than by considerations ofsocial justice. Consequently, as-sistance is given only grudginglyand sparingly to peoples in direneed. But, says Father Janssen,“The solidarity of this communi-

ty is the basis of obligations ofinternational social justice.” Headds: “This solidarity is the con-

sequence of the common originand the common destiny of all

men, whatever be their race or

nationality or fortune.”

IT SHOULD not be difficult forCatholics to grasp the meaningof Father Janssen's argument.The world wide implications ofsocial justice have been clearlyspelled out by the Popes. x

As recently as April, Pope PiusXII re-emphasized the obligationsof international social justice,saying: “The unequal division ofthe gifts and treasures of nature

gives to men the moral obliga-tion to aid each other, each ac-

cording to the understanding and

strength he has received. This

obligation constantly increases in

proportion to the increase in the

power at the disposal of the so-

cial or national group.”There is reason to be proud

of the contribution which Cath-olic leaders and writers have

made and are making to the

development of a sense of so-

cial justice in industrial rela-

tions. But the problems of to-

day’s small world present new

challenges to all of us.

We cannot afford to regard“foreign aid” as “just a politicalproblem.” We must work dili-

gently to raise it to a much high-er level than that, by applyingto it the principles of social jus-tice which can best bring aboutthe achievement of a true inter-national community.

God Love You

Tale About

Dog’s TailBy Bishop Fulton J. SheenA hundred years from now men

will see that communism playedinto the hands of God. As Josephsaid to’his brethern who sold himinto slavery: “You intended it for

evil, but God intended it for

[good.” Alreadywe can see thatthe blood of the

martyrs throughcommunism hasbecome the seedof Christians inKorea.

One priestalone has 45bconverts under

instruction.Other priests have convert

classes in from 10 to 26 villages,traveling from one to the otheron bicycle.

One humorous incident in-volved a convert who was a fish-

erman. Village dogs always tried

to steal his fish. One day, a doghe had never seen before came tohis stand, but instead of stealinga fish he just wagged his tail infriendly greeting.

The fish merchant inquiredafter the owner of such a politedog. When told that he belongedto the priest the old man wentto Father and said: “If you train

your dogs so well, it ought to bea good religion.’’

The story of course leaves outgrace which is always the reason

for conversions. But the pointis that one of the .most fertilefields in the missions at presentis Korea.

If the wagging of a dog’s tail

can bring a soul to instruction,,then maybe our tale will bringyou to see that many blessingswill come to you if you aid our

missionaries in Korea.

GOI) LOVE YOU to J.S.C. for

$45. “Kindly accept this small giftin thanksgiving for completing45 years in the police depart-ment.”

...to Mrs. M. A. V. for

$lO. “This is my way of saying‘thank you’ to Our Dear Lord andall Heaven for helping me re-

gain my health after an opera-tion.”

...to all those who were

taxed too much and sent theirrefunds to help the missionaries

who do not hesitate to overtaxtheir energies for the sake ofthe sick, poor and needy of theworld.

Our Blessed Mother loves all

of her children the world

over. You can prove that you

share her Mother love by pray-ing the Worldmission Rosaryfor the poor of the world. The

sacrifice-offering of $2 that you

send along with your requestfor the Rosary will aid materal-

ly those whom your prayers aid

spiritually.Cut out this column, pin your

sacrifice to it and send it to

Bishop Fulton J. Sheen, Na-

Director, Society for the Propa-gation of the Faith, 366 Fifth

Ave., New York 1, or to your dio-

cesan director: Bishop Martin W.Stanton, 31 Mulberry St., Newark2; Rt. Rev. Msgr. William F.

Louis, 24 DeGrasse St., Paterson.

GIVE TIME as well as moneyto the Church.

Saints of the WeekSunday, May 25 Pentecost

Sunday. This feast commemoratesthe birthday of the CatholicChurch when the Holy Ghost des-

cended upon the Apostles in the

form of fiery tongues. Generallythis date is the feast of St. Greg-ory VII, Pope-Confessor. He was

born of poor parents in Tuscanyabout 1013, was educated in Romeand entered religious life in

Cluny, France. Pope St. Leo IXcalled him to Rome, where heserved the Pontiff and fouj ofhis successors as councilor. He

was archdeacon of Rome in 1073

when he was elected Pope. He

withstood attempts of Henry IV

of Germany to usurp, ecclesiasti-

cal powers and at length the mon-

arch sought absolution of the

Pope at Canossa. Later Henry re-

lapsed, set up an anti-pope and

sent Pope Gregory into exile.

Pope Gregory died at Salerno in

1085.

Monday, May 26 Pentecost

Monday. Feast of St. Philip Neri,

[Confessor. Rom in Florence in

1 1515, he became tutor in Rome to

a nobleman. He devoted his leis-

ure to the study of theology. In

1548 with 14 companions he

founded the Congregation of the

Oratory. He was not ordained un-

til 1551 and the Oratory was not

approved officially until 1583, but

for more than 30 years it was the

center of religious life in Rome

Known as the "Second Apostle of

Rome," St. Philip died in 1595

and was canonized in 1622.

Tuesday, May 27 Pentecost

Tuesday. Feast of St. Bede the

Venerable, Confessor-Doctor. He

| wasborn in Wearmouth, England,

in 673 and as a child wr as offeredto the Benedictine Abbey of SS.Peter and Paul at Wearmouth-Jarrow. He was professed thereunder the founder, St. BenedictBiscop, and spent the rest of hislife at the - abbey. He was or-

dained by St. John of Beverleyand was renowned as a scholar.The Bible was his principal studyHis “Ecclesiastical History of the

English People” earned him thetitle of Father of English History.He died in 735, on Ascension Eve,and his last words were “theGloria." (

Wednesday, May 28 Pente-cost Wednesday. Feast of St. Au-gustine of Canterbury, Bishop-Confessor. He shares vwith PopeSt. Gregory the Great .the title of

Apostle of the English. Beforehis election, he sent 40 monksunder St. Augustine to England,where they were received by KingSt. Ethelbert, who was converted.

| St. Augustine was consecrated

[the first Archbishop of Canter-

[bury and achieved great success

!»n spreading the Faith through-|out England. He died about 604and was buried in the Abbeychurch outside of the walls ofCanterbury, which he had found-ed.

Thursday, May 29 Pentecost

Thursday. Feast of St. Mary Mag-dalen of Pani, Virgin. She washorn in 1566 and entered the Car-melite Convent in Florence atthe age of 18 Despite poor health,she was noted for her practice ofself-denial, humility and patience.

Friday, May JO _ PentecostFriday. Feast of St. Felix I, Pope-Martyr He was a Roman by birthand served as Pope from 269 to274. He was the first to condemnthe heresy of Paul of Samosata.

Saturday, May 31 Pentecost

Saturday. Generally this date lathe feast of Mary, Queen of theUniverse. This feast was institut-ed by Pope Pius XII in his en-

cyclical letter "Ad Caeli Regi-nam," issued Oct. 11, 1954 Hedirected the feast to be com-

memorated throughout the worldeach year on May 31, and that

on the same day the consecrationol the human race to the Immac-ulate Heart of Mary be renewed

so "that there may arise an eraof happiness that will rejoice inthe triumph of religion and in

i Christian peace."

STRANGE BUT TRUE

Little-Known Facts for CatholicsBy M.J. MURRAY Copj-ri**,!, I»S»,ffCWC, Hews Kenton

What Must One Do

For an IndulgenceThese questions and answers are taken from Lesson 33 of

' l his We Believe : By This We Lire," the revised edition of theBaltimore Catechism So, 3, reprinted by permission of the Con-

fraternity of Christian Doctrine.

What must we do to sain an

indulgence for ourselves?

To gain an indulgence for

ourselves we must be in the

state of grace, have at’ least a

general intention of gaining the

indulgence, and perform thfeworks required by the Church.

(a) Only baptized persons are

capable of gaining indulgences.

(b) The state of grace is re-

quired for gainifig an indul-

gence at least at the moment

when the prescribed work is

finished. Even a person in mor-

tal sin, therefore, can begin to

gain an indulgence, unless the

prescribed work demands the

state of grace, for example,Holy Communion.

(c) Since a general intentionis sufficient to gain indulgences,it is well to express from time

to time, especially in our morn-

ing prayer, the desire to gainall the indulgences* attached tothe prayers we shall say and

to the good works we shall per-form.

(and) To gain an indulgence the

work required by the Church

must be performed fully and

according to the' prescribedtime, place, and manner.

Can we gain indulgences forothers?

We cannot gain indulgencesfor other living persops, but

we can gain them for the soulsin purgatory, since the Churchmakes most indulgences appli-cable to them.

Scripture“Then they all blessed the

just judgment of the Lord, whohad discovered the things that

were hidden. And so betaking

themselves to prayers they be-

sought him that the sin whichhad been committed might be

forgotten. But <he most vali-

ant Judas exhorted the peopleto keep themselves from sin,forasmuch as they saw before

their eyes what had happenedbecause of the sins of thosethat were slain. . -

“And making a gathering, he

sent twelve thousand drachmasof silver to Jerusalem for sac-

rifice to be offered for the sins

of the dead, thinking well and

religiously concerning the res-

urrection.’ 1 (For if he had not

hoped that they that were slainshould rise again, it would haveseemed superfluous and vain

to pray for the dead.)

“And because he consideredthat they who had fallen asleepwith godliness had great gracelaid up for them.

“It is therefore a holy andwholesome thought to pray forthe dead, that they may beloosed from sins” (II Macha-

bees 12:41-46).

VOIR DONATIONS makeCatholic charity projects possi-ble.

Are Parents 'Making a Mess'

Of Rearing Modern Youth?By Rev. John L. Thomas, S.J.

Assistant Professor of Sociology, St. Louis University

What’sHvrong with modern parents? We knock our-

selves out to feed, clothe and shelter our children, <we send

them to school, we give them more freedom, spendingmoney, and leisure than we ever enjoyed, yet every time

we pick up the paper, we read about some “expert” who

says we’re making a mess of it. I know there’s a terrific

juvenile delinquency problem, but if it’s our fault, whydon’t they tell us what we’re doing wrong?

That’s a good question, Jerry.Unfortunately, few of the expertsseem to agree on what’s wrong,so they’re not likely to agree on

solutions. Just to keep the record

straight, it should be noted that

a large block

of modern par-ents are doinga good job.Their children

aren’t delin-

quents; in fact,

they don't even

belong to that

peculiar mod-

ern categorycalled “teen-

agers.” They’re just normal kids,passing through the usual stagesof development leading to ma-

turity.

AS YOU REALIZE, of course, |changed social conditions offer!new problems for both parents |and children. Let’s review these i

briefly before considering what |parents can do about them.

From the viewpoint of par-

ents, many new influences such

as radio, television, ears, and

so forth, affect young peopletoday and increase parental

problems. Likewise, the fam-

ily has less social importance

today, so that young peopletend to spend more time with

their peer group, the gang.At the same time, the father's

job tends to take him away from

the home much of the time, with

the result that mother has to

take over the rearing of children

and father's influence in the fam-

ily circle becomes minimal.

FROM THE VIEWPOINT of

young people, modern society!places undue stress on irrespon-sibility, lack of seriousness, and!

having a good time during youth.sLikewise, it places many young

people in a social vacuum—theydon’t want to go to school, yet

they are too young to be em-

ployed.

Finally, although boys and girls

reach biological maturity well inadvance of the age at which it is

customary to marry in our soci-

ety, their prolonged, intimate,relatively unsupervised associa-tion is widely tolerated, if not

openly promoted. They are givenlittle instruction and protection,while the exploitation of the sex-

ual drive is freely permitted in

advertising, literature and enter-,tainment.

WHAT CAN PARENTS do un-

der these conditions? Their es-

sential task remains the same.

They must guide, teach, and sup-port their growing children in thedifficult process which goes onwithin youth as they strive to

reach the balance of maturity.Children must learn the norms,

moral rules, and modes of con-duct expected by their parentsand society. As their powers andfaculties develop, they must ac-

quire the habit of controlling and

directing their impulses anddrives according to approvedstandards. In this process, par-ents are present not only to teach

1 and encourage, but more impor-tant, to serve as models. Chil-

dren learn by imitation of elderi.

Hence, it is not sufficient to

feed, clothe, and protect yourchildren. You must five them

ideals, something to strive for

in life as men and women.

What is the meaning of life?

What are the goals worth work-

ing for? What qualities of char-

acter, what formal training do

they require? You must putsomething "inside” your chil-

dren.

This gradual task of characterformation, of “building in” mo-

tives, self-discipline, life goalsand aspirations is the most im-

portant job that parents have.

DON’T THINK you are beinggood to your children by protect-ing them from hard work in

school, a sense of responsibility,and the “harsh" realities of life.Youth likes a challenge. Youngpeople should not be protectedas little children. They are quitecapable of responsibility and se-

rious thought, for they are youngmen and women well on the waytoward maturity.

Help them develop worth-

while life goals. Show them

that what they now do in school

will pretty well decide what

they will be later in life. Theyhave energy, strength, and en-

durance to spare; if it is an-,

motivated and undirected, we

shouldn’t be surprised if theyuse it destructively.

! So, Jerry, don’t stew over the

j criticism of the experts. Do your

job, as your father did before( you, and your children will ba

your reward.

May 24,1958 THE ADVOCATE 9

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Mission Activity HelpsTo Promote Church Unity

Some people ask: “What need

is there for sending missionaries

abroad for the conversion of

heathens when we have so manyat home?” Would such peopleever make sacrifices for the

home missionaries? Would theyvoid the command, “Go teach yeall nations” until such time as

there is not an unsaved man inthe United States?

There were piany Jews who did

not believe in Christ and yetChrist commanded Peter to gointo Caesarea and to baptize theheathen centurian, Cornelius.

The sending of ihisaionariesabroad is the condition of awak-

ening the slumbering members ofthe Church at home. In the

Church we. have unity with Our-selves only because we have unitywith all the members of the

Church throughout the world.Share in the noble work of mak-

ing converts by helping the HolyFather help his missionaries. Di-rect your sacrifices to the Societyfor the Propagation of the Faith,the Pope’s own society for the

support of missionaries, every-where.

Maryknollers OperateFour Summer Campsla Kyoto, Japan, mere than 500

youngsters participated in thelast summer camping program ofthe diocese, according to a reportby the diocesan youth activities

director, Rev. Thomas W. Taka-

hashi, M M.

Four camps were established

two . years ago for youngsters inthe Kyoto Diocese. At Sakamoto,the largest camp, more than 300children enjoyed the facilities ofthe Maryknoll parish on the westside of Lake Biwa. Tents weredonated by the famed American

Seventh Cavalry Regiment sta-tioned in Otsu.

Korean Bishop NotesRise in VocationsWith the increasing number of

converts in the Vicariate Apos-tolic of Kwangju, Korea, BishopHarold W. Henry of the Colum-ban Fathers is faced with the hap-py circumstance of many voca-

tions to the religious life amongthe people. This means that sem-

inaries and novitiates are on the

agenda for the coming year."I have acquired some property

in town for my minor seminary,”writes Bishop Henry, “There is anold factory on the grounds whichI am going to remodel by puttingin a couple of dormitories, class

halls, dining room and chapel.The new place is just down theroad from our boys’ school andthe seminarians will continue totake most of their classes there.

“Right now I am on the look-out for a site for a novitiate forthe Caritas Sisters, a commun-

ity I brought to this country a

year ago. They already have 12

postulants, are receiving eightmore this month, and have

over 20 on the waiting list—

there is just no room for them.“I am anxious to see this com-

munity develop; they have a tre-mendous spirit and are greatworkers. They will goout into the

country districts and stay as longas three months (even thoughthey won’t be' able to have dailyMass) to give instnfctions to thecatechumens.

"I have established several par-ishes since I returned to Korealast December, and have dedicat-ed anew mission chapel and a

new church. I manage to keepbusy. Thank you for all your kind-

nesses to me and my missions.”

Outside Finished,

'

Inside Is BareA young Chinese Xavierian mis-

sionary, Rev. Augustine Yang, is

working in a small community ofCatholics at Tomitaka in Japan,where he went shortly after hisordination. He had escaped fromcommunist killers in his own

land, and in thanksgiving he hasdedicated his life to God’s servicein Japan.

For some time now FatherYang has been trying to devel-op his parish at Tomitaka. Hehas a goodly number of Catho-lics under his care, and. theyawait with joy the church and

kindergarten promised them.Father Yang reports that while

the masons were erecting thechurch building he was able tohave them add another buildingat a great saving. This worklooks beautiful on the outside, butinside the buildings are empty.The workmen finished their task,and his funds as well.

His old friends in China can-

not help him, of course, so Fath-

er Yang looks to us for assistance.He wants to finish the buildingsfor his people, and they trusthim to accomplish this task. Manylittle offerings must be gatheredpatiently in order that the workbe completed, and he asks our

prayerful support for its success.

Mission AppealAt St. Michael's

Rev. John F. Davis will make

aa appeal on behalf oT the So-

ciety for the Propagation of theFaith on May 25 at Our LadyQueen of Peace, Maywood,Rev. Thomas F. Burke, pastor.

Bishop Stanton expresses his

apredation to Father Bnrkeend the other pastors of the

Archdiocese for their coopera-tion in making these appealspossible.

Society for the Propagationof the Faith

Archdiocese of Newark:Most Rev. Martin W. Stanton, S.T.D., Ph.D., LL.D.31 Mulberry St, Newark 2, N. J.Phone: MArket 2-2803Hours: Dally, 9 am. to 5 p.m.; Saturday, 9 a.m. to 12.

biocese of Paterson:

Rt. Rev. Msgr. William F.*LouU, J.C.D.24 De Grasse St., Paterson 1, N. J.Phone: ARmory 4-0400Honrs: Daily, 9 am. to 5 pm.; Saturday, 9 am. to 12.

Apostolate for Vocations.

Reveals New

Mission UnitBOSTON Starting in

February, priests of the

Boston Archdiocese will be

sent to understaffed diocesesin South America, it has beenannounced by Archbishop RichardJ. Cushing.

He made the announcement ata $25-a-plate dinner marking the150th anniversary of the archdio-

cese. Proceeds from the dinner,attended by 700 people, will beused to finance the project at thestart.

Priests who leave the arch-diocese as missionaries will be

organized into a pew religioussociety to be called the Societyof St. James the Apostle, the

Archbishop said. One reason forthe move, he said, is that Bostonhas a surplus of priests.

Plan Essay ContestFor SeminariansST. MEINRAD, Ind. (NC)-An

essa y contest tn U S. Church his-

tory, with $3OO in prizes, has beenannounced by St. Meinrad MajorSeminary here. Entry deadline isFeb. 1. 1939

The contest is open to any ma-

jor seminarian in the UnitedStates who has not undertaken

graduate work in history. Essayentries must not be more than

3,000 words In length and msydeal with any phase of CatholicChurch history in this country.

YEARLY EVENT: The annual Communion breakfast of the Holy Name Society ofQueen of Angels parish, Newark, was held May 11. Shown here are left to right,seated, Rev. Thomas J. Carey, Rev. Philip S. Hurley, S.J., of Fordham University andPhilip Thigpen, probation officer. Standing, Irvin Booker, toastmaster; WilliamLemon, chairman, and Walter Joyce, president, Essex County Holy Name Federation.

Explains Need for Priests,

Lay Help in Brazil MissionsNEW YORK (RNS)—Archbishop

Alberto Gaudencio Ramos of Be-

lem, Para, BrazU, paid hightribute here to North American

priests working in Brazil, but

stressed that many more areneeded to cope with the influxof Protestant missionaries.

Interviewed on the eve of hisreturn home after a month’svisit to the U. S., he also

stressed the need for lay volun-teers to help combat an “alarm-

ing” growth of spiritism amongpoorly-educated Catholics.

THE ARCHBISHOP, presidentof the Secretariate of ChristianDoctrine o'! the National Confer-

ence of Bishops of Brazil, a coun-

terpart of the NCWC in the U. S.,said Protestants in Brazil) where

more than 93% of the more

than 60,000,000 population are

Catholics) numbered 1,741,430.Adherents of spiritism totaled

825,553.

He attributed the Protestant

and spiritism gains largely tothe fact that there is only one

priest in Brazil for every7,000 Catholics.

“We have only around 9,000priests in Brazil,”, he said,“whereas we need at least fivetimes that number, not only totake care of the faithful in townsand cities, but of those in jungleregions who are deprived by cir-

cumstances of any constantcontact with the Church.

“Protestant missionaries havemillions of dollars at their dis-

posal to help them keep in touchwith widely scattered communi-ties which Catholic priests some-

times cannot visit more than

once a year. The Protestantswork through teams of ministers,doctors, nurses and helpersequipped with expensive river

boats which carry them on reg-ular trips to isolated groups. TheCatholic missionary, on the other

hand, often must work alone andwith the poorest means of trans-

portation to bring the Mass andthe Sacraments to his far-flungflock." ,

SPIRITISTS, he said, operatecenters to which rich and poorcome to have their future fore-

told, to obtain cures for sick-

ness, or to communicate with a

departed relative or friend. Hesaid the spiritists are bitterlyand openly opposed to the Cath-olic clergy but do not hesitate

to ape Catholic ceremonials attheir seances and other functions.

Archbishop Ramos said manyCatholics lack understanding oftheir faith because the Churchin Brasil lacks the parochialschool system where the child

is given a solid Catholic train-

ing.

He said there are now some

dozen Catholic radio stations

broadcasting programs designedto foster a deeper knowledge of

the faith and to stimulate a

practical interest in the Church’ssocial welfare work.

He said that despite its prob-lems, the Church in Brazil is op-timistic regarding the future.

Parish life in the large centers,he said, compares favorably

with that in the United Statesand Brazilian Catholic Action iswidespread and flourishing. “Allour problems,” he commented,“boil down to the one great fun-damental need: more priests.”

Declares Islam

Gains in AfricaVATICAN CITY fRNS) - The

Vatican Radio, in a broadcast ap-pealing (or more priests and mis-

sionaries for Africa, said a “veri-

table race” is taking place there

between Christianity and Islam.

Declaring that “at present Is-lam is soaring ahead," the Vaticanstation said that “out of a 220,-000,000 population In Africa,only 20,000,000 are Catholics."

"The danger is," it added, “thatIslam will make further progresaunlesa Catholics throughout theworld provide more priests and

missionaries. The need for them

is very urgent.”

10 the advocate May 24,1958

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SPIRITUAL DIRICTORRev. Francis Campbell

of Portland, Ore.Rev. John F. Cullen

of Philadelphia, Pa.Rev. John F. Scully

of St. Augustine, Fla.

Bishop James A McNultyof Paterson, N. J.

Archbishop Joseph F. Rummelof NewOrleans, La.

To be appointed

Msgr. Eugene A. Loftusof Buffalo, N. Y.

Rev. Edmund A. Grayof Sacramento, Calif.

To be appointedby Toledo Diocese

Rev. Henry Rousseau, ChaplainoI Minnesota State K. of C.

Bishop Andrew G. Grutkaof Gary, Ind.

Rev. Charles J. Traceyo! Oakland, Calif. '

ACCOMMODATIONS ARE LIMITED...

so

arrange for your membership quickly. For freefolders describing the pilgrimage of your choice,

_see your Travel Agent or contact,

American ExpressTravel Service

6S Broadway, Now York 6 WHitohail 4*2000

or l. Bamberger A Company Travel Bureau

IST Market Si., Newark 1 MArkot 2*1212

Yea may NOW purebase earForeign and Domestic Inclu-sive travel services ee ear Tima Payment Plan.,. smalldawn payment... up la 30 months tn pay the balence.

ROUND AIR CONDITIO*^

Why Does Leber Service Shtisfy?Iv«ry family it atturad axcallont Sarvica at tha lowrtt

pottibla eott . , . without tala* prottura.

LEBER FUNERAL HOMECOftNKR 20th ST. and KOUUVARD, UNION CITT

TIIiPHONIS, UNion 3-1100-1101Oar Soroka it AooiUkl* la Firry family

rf Rogordlon of ftnontiai Condition

POR A ULAXiD VACATIONCOM!TO

KITTATINNY HOTELSIASIDI PARK, N. J.

■ lamiU. Ih.—*—l A-L 14—14

au.i * O. k. Ok.—-a MilAAf

Plenty ParkingREASONABLE RATES

HOME COOKING

AMERICAN PUN

■-*—j-im in

mi gm| WmH* It Ibili R*#m

PIRST AVENUE

SEASIDE PARK t-043Sin No. Jtraoy 'til 5 P. M. coll

HA 7-4737

DAY • WEEK • SEASON

EUROPEAN PLAN

THE WEDGWOODPRES PARKINS

201-205 -FIRST AVENUE

SPRINO LAKE, N. J.Mr*. Gerald Dundon OlBion M144

NORWOOD INNAVON-BY-THE-SEA, N.J. (Asbury

Area). Ocean bathlnc directly

from your room. A family

favorite. 'Famous for excel-lent meals. Rates reasonable.

; Near churches. Modern Amer-

’lean plan. Free parkin*.Tel. PRospect 6-9831

J. A. PRYOR. Owner-Met,

A distinctive hotel

lot those who

t expect the bestl

Oponi Juno 20tS

OuMooc tall walar iwlmmlng poolter onclutivo uto of swtiti. lalhor'tluncheon. Ocean lalhlng. Oolf.FlihlM. Tonalt. Convenient laMonmouth fork Itoco Track.

Dollehttal rooms, tscellent food.

Tol. ClbteaN9-7100

*

SPRING LAKE HACK, N. J.V Gaoffla W. DotHq, Mgr, y

OCEAN VIEW HOTEL

.•Tf.-'N*

BAY HIAD, NIW JERSEY

An American Family Type Reaort

unchanced throughout the years.

No Honky Tonk. We offer a private

beach on the ocaanfront, well

maintained and guarded. With meala

from $39 up weekly.

RISER VAX IONS: Fh. TW 11*11

H. CUDAHY TILTON. Owner Mgr.

HOTEL BRIGHTONJll Third Ave, Atbury Pork, N, J.

ONI BLOCK TO BEACHInspect our accommodation! before

•election. No rciervationi necessary*• BOOM* WITH PRIVATE BATH

• ONI AND TWO BOOM APT*.

• All APT*. NIWLV DICOBATID• COOKING FACILITIES AVAILABLE• FBI! OCIAN BATHINO• FREE PABKINO• T.V. BOOM FOB CHILDREN

• CHURCH NEARBY

• RATI* $). PER PERSON,DOUBLI OCCUPANCY

• SPECIAL RATI* FOR FAMILII* -

WEEK. MONTH. OR IEAtON

Mr. & Mrs. John KawasOwner and Mgr.

Atbury Peril: PR 4-41*4, PR 5-9504

PARAMUS, N. J. CO I-43SS

Wake Robin Inn

Taka •

•wslHhrt'.

_

il» iconic . -*>*

W

«tte> la tb. JL -

»W* ofthii

tatting Ubeautiful Hill*. A

Inn oa 20

boating, ton-

al* mi |ubm and other

•porta. Nearby golf andftanring

Crtlaa Including outdoorrkecua* and ipacialtr

nlghta. Pina paneled taproan. Attractive loungai,mnajr tarrecae, gannwabTV. Friendly itafl and con-

p«i»l companion* Auction*.Win thoitroi andhietorit•itoi nearby. Qutitanding

IH kauri (ram N. Y.

WAKE ROBIN INN

Private Beach * Glorious SurfTHE FAMOUS HOTEL !■

WARRENNear

DIRECTLY ON THE OCEAN* AT SPRING LAKE, N. J.

Beautiful St. Catherine'* ChurchEARLY BIRD RATES te July 3rdCheerful roem-eettinea colorfullyappointed. Wonderful food. All

sporte. Superviaed actlvitiea for

children.Write or phone for

Attractive Rate*

Fred C. Coagrove • Glbaon *-S*ooSeaton June 19-Sept. 2

finerf Spot on the Jersey Coast

HULETT’S ON LAKE GEORGE. .. th« liveliest and mostpopular resort ontbsmost beautiful lake In America. Everything on

thepremises—2soacres... swimming... danc-

ingto a LesterLaninorchestra... tennis ... golf. . . cocktail lounge . . . movies. Two private

sandy beaches.Ideal for children. Amerioanplanor housekeeping cottages.Churchesadjoin prop-erty. 158.50 weekly, and up. Including meals.

Special rate! 10% off for week of Jane 21

Booklet ”CA" on request

Matt'i Im*c «.T.. Ptm Clnms. *.Y. mi

THE WEST ENDFacing the Ocaan

ASBURY PARK, N. i.

,150-OUTSIDE ROOMS

All with Running WatarMany with Prlvata BathsShowers an All Floors

24-HOUR ELEVATOR SERVICEATTRACTIVI RATES

FREE OCEAN BATHINGL. T. DUANE, Ownar

T. F. JARONSKI, Mgr.Telephone PRospoct 5-2727

ON THE OCEAN FRONTat Spring Lake Beach, N. J.Private Beach, Excellent Food. Con-tenial Guests, Elevator. Modlfied-Amer-**n, £ Un “**••• Boardwalk.GoU. Tennis, Fishing. Dancing. SupperClubs. Summer Theatre. Shops. Movies

For a REAL VACATIONcomo to Spring Lako

SEASON from Juno 20th, 1958A. P. ST. THOMAS. Owner-Mgr.Brochure and Rates on Roouost.

01 t-7700"RDUCRD RATES TO JULY I

I' ! ImT

at Spring Lake, N. ,

A Usury Hotel el Dii linguhhtdReputation; 57 Milos from Now York

Via Garden State Parkway.

"OFINJ JUNE lttfc" •

attractive ratesOOR OWN PRIVATE BATHINO BEAI

TSfXfi"*** Lunrh eons for BathetDtnlng Room newly Alr-CondiUonod

and RedecoratedAir Conditioned Bor A Grill

G^*f r*To'nnl!r1 v

0r;.l ;Hl ' »«*«>‘ondenl

uolf. Tennis, Yschting. Ocean InlalConvenient to

Monmouth Park Race TrackSMARTEST OF SEASIDE RESORTSJAMES J. FARREIt, Oon'l Mar.mix M. STANDEN. Roe.

Reeervetionai Tel. Olbaen a-sogg

s

|nr^,

CINTHOf TOWN

mnymieittrajAus

l aaylaht jrC—»—«— Malt W I

'SSSteSL.I •• JV ,# Mnk Mm

FREE'lrowf! r.siff ••‘*-**—,4401

$32. Wk. Rents Shore Home

PULL SEASON ONLY $250."Little Summer Home" fadn* the

Hi. Attractive. Immaculately clean,

electric, city water, caa. fumlahedr

mile lone private aea beach, aalt

water pool, nlaht awlmmln*. amuae-

ment park, kiddle ridea. wooda. Fun

For All the Family. Immediate in-

apectlon euaieated. Follow New Jar-

aey Shore Route No. 35 to Pirate

Ship.” Cllffwood Beach. N. J.. or

taka Aabury Park bua from Onr

hound Terminal. 343 W. 34th St..

New York and cat oM at Pirate

Ship. Phone MAtawan 1-9759, Write

for free folder D.

GREEN CROFTMemorial Day Specialttirtln* Thur*. Nit* t* fun. Nit*

• LAKEFRONT LOCATION

• EXCELLENT SWIMMING

.00 •

per period

double occ.

Mod.Am. Plan

W. BICHTOLDT HOP. HIM

LAKI HOPATCONO, N. J.

$l5

MADISON HOTEL1M 7th AVI., ASBURY BARK, N. J.

I BIG PORCHES OVERLOOKING OCEAN

Amer. & Euro. Plan Family Hotel. Mod-

erately Priced. Famous for our Home

Cookin* A Bakins. Catholic Ownership.

PRII PARKINS • NIAR CHURCH!*

PR 1-4444

JIANNIJACQUES, Owner-Met.

"34n*/vrrcftpRINO LAKE BEACH N4. ttUfCL

PLANEUROPEANwith

Delicious Continental Breakfast

P.M. to fundaydecoration day

RATI, Thursday

P.M. per person

Reaervatlons, phone Olbton f-lIM

i nreaxi

'l500

Iprlni Lake Beach, N.J.

The Lake ViewA Choice Vacation Spot.

ATTRACTIVE RATESBlock to Ocean A Board-walk. Opena European

Plan May 38. Araer. Plan

June 30. Free Parkin*.Ph. GI 8-0815

JAMES E. FITZPATRICK

Moot your old friondt

and now at ...

MacßeynoldsASBURY PARK, N. J.

Delightfully situated 2 blocks from

ocean opposito beautiful Sunset lake.

Cpmfortable rooms. Especially goodmeals, 3,000 sq. ft. of spacious ve-

randa with sundtek. Convenient to

churches. JUNE SPECIAL: any five

consecutive days, 328.75 per person

WITH WONDERFUL MEALS. RESERVE

NOW.

307 Sunset Ave. PRaspect 3-1482

SHANAHAN'S INNPittsfield 8800 LANESBORO, MASS.

In the Beautiful Berkshires

T5O acres of vacation fun e Filtered swimming pool,shuffleboard, badminton, croquet, ping pong,

recreation room.

THOROUGHLY MODERN HOUSE AND COTTAGES.

EXCELLENT FOOD. WRITE FOR BOOKLET.

# Hosts: MARY and MICHAEL SHANAHAN e

EMERALD ISLE HOUSE"IT'S IRELAND IN THE CATSKILLS"

SO. CAIRO, N. Y. Tel. CAIRO 9-9526

Modern resort with Irish-American spirit and hospitality.Beautiful large, airy rooms. Hot and cold showers. Fine

home cooking (3) hot meals daily. All fresh fruits and

vegetables. Good food is our guarantee. Swim and fish

in the clean and cool Catskill River on our grounds. All

lawn games. Churches nearby. Bar & Grill. Dancing to

our own orchestra nightly. Entertainment. Adult rates

535-537 per week includes everything. Special rate

far children. Bus from N. Y. to our door. By car use

N.Y. Thruway to Exit 21. Turn right three miles to our

house. Write for booklet.

OWEN and JULIA LAMB

SPECIAL DECORATION DAY -3 DAYS $l7

Visit Beautiful GRAYMOOR1958 PILCRIMAOI SIASON

Sundays from June 1 through October 26DIALOOUB MAIIH 11, IS, 12:45

CONFESSION* 11 A.M. TO S P.M.

Novena to St. Anthony, Sermon, Benediction -3 p.m.

Exposition of tho Bitsstd Sacramont after 12:45 Man till6p.m.GRAYMOOR it J mile, north of Peektkill, N. Y. on Routo f, acrott Roar Moun-

tain Bridge from Watt Point. Cafotoria open Sunday!. Parking areaon groundi•USIS lIAVI

Pert Authority But terminal 41,t t Sth Avenue, N.Y.C. 5:45 to 41J a mTICKETS at WINDOW 17; Bute* Leave Oraymeer at 4:15 p.m.

Tel. Wltcontin 7-5350 • In New Jertey call MArket 2-7000 (Public Service)

for further Information write:

Pr. Guardian, S.A., Graymoor friar*, Oarrlten 1, N. Y.

Telephona: OArriton 4-3471

Visitors Welcome Every Day as well as Pilgrimage Sundays

CATHOLIC TRAVEL LEAGUE

"PilyUiuiQtA t'»

LOURDES,

and featuring visits to ROME and BRUSSELSIRELAND, FRANCE. SPAIN, ITALY and BELGIUM

BtLOIAN {jJcnQd AIRLINES

REV. JOHN HEWETSOM, PASTOR REV. JAMES SHARPSt. Joseph's, Mendhem, N. J. St. Peter The Apostle, Riveredge, H. i

DEPARTING NIW YORKDEPARTING NEW YORK

JULY 3, 1958 JULY 31, 1958

17 DAYS *995 EXTENSIONS TO ENGLAND, PORTUGAL(FATIMA) AND SWITZERLAND

OTHER DEPARTURES APRII THRU SEPTEMBEREOR INFORMATION AND RESERVATIONS. WRITE

CATHOLIC TRAVIL LIAGUIH4I ERQAOWAT. NEW YORK 13. N. Y. . C01..k,T

IN THE 1958 PROGRAM OF

Al CATHOLIC TRAVEL LEAGUE PILGRIMAGESv* lo Lourdes and Europe

ACCOMMODATIONS ARE STILL AVAILABLE ON THE FOLLOWING:

Otparturi

July 10

July 10

My 22

My 30

An-1

A«f. 1

An 15

An* io

An. 22

*n- 20

SntioOct 4

Bellrrille DioceseOkiekeeu Diocese

Baltmct Arckditcese

Spiritual Dirtctar

Bestee ArckdieceseRockville Cntrc Diocese

Sixtk NaticMl frisk

PUtOwyU Diocese

ClmlMtf Pitt titReeses Ctty-St. lesey* Diocese

*-

BNCII9

Rtlrr.lhr.lcMurdA.BMNrRet. Jckc J. SelllvnRev. WHIMb J. Swift

Rrr.TkMnj.Mvdn*frylev. Mnr.Tkcmt J. RillcyArckkiskep Rickerd J. CoskinBhAcp Wetter P. ReReekergRev. Frame M. Beret

J-AnAMN-thdNnhBtDev. Ihr. WNNea 0. fenwoVwyRw.Mnr.jcoekC.Skhy•Mkeg Jeka J. Kiel

BtsfcnMNP.Cedy****** leteek A. Beritk

let unMTuet eivuN comm ecTAiu. mnii

CATHOLIC TRAVEL LEAGUE1MIBreedwey, NewYork 2J, Itr., or toll CO S-7MQ

Ready Orphans ' Village

Richard Can’t WaitFor Rockleigh Move

By Anne Mae BuckleyENGLEWOOD CLIFFS Richard, who’s only six

eats his dinner in a quonset hut.He has to stand in line with dozens of other boys before

he gets into the shower.He doesn’t have his own bufeau or desk or closet and

•hartntf MRIMAn nnortorc ttrifVi (to --

(haring common quarters with 62

other boys means he doesn’t have

very much privacy.Richard doesn’t really mind,

though. The Sisters who take

care of him are his very goodfriends in fact, they’re like a

mother to a fellow.

And he goes to school andlearns interesting things every

day and plays like mad with his

friends and if he feels sick a

doctor comes to make him better.

Sometimes there are movies Andit’s nice to be so near a chapel;you can go to Mass any morning,and you can drop in on God for

a visit quite often.

BUT RICHARD is going to

move away soon. He got anew

suitcase for Christmas so didall the boys —and he’s had it

packed for ever so long. In it

are a lot of things that belong to

just him six pairs of socks, one

dress coat, sweaters, two pairsof pajamas . . .

Every time Richard looks atthe suitcase he tingles, becauseIt makes him think of the Vil-

lage St. Joseph’s Village outin Rockleigh. That’s where

Richard will be living soon, bysummer anyway. And when hewent to visit the Village last

week he liked everything so

well that he can't wait to

move in.

Neither can the other boys atSt. Joseph’s Home here. Nor thelittle girls from Barbara Giver-naud and the big girls from St.

Joseph’s Home in Jersey Citytoo. Nor the Sisters of St. Jo-

seph of Newark who care for thechildren in the three homes and

are building the Village for them.

Richard had heard so much

about St. Joseph’s Village from

the Sisters. They told him the

Village has 17 buildings all con-

nected by a glass-enclosed cor-

ridor that runs seven-eighths of a

mile, and that there are 58 love-

ly acres around them.

THE SISTERS said the Villageis planned according to anew

system—th£ cottage system, theycalled it. That means there will

be six “cottages,” three for boysand three for girls, instead of

big dormitories. Twenty-four chil-

dren of the same age group willliv« in each cottage, six in a

room, with a Sister who’ll betheir “mother.” Richard thinks

that’s a fine arrangement, be-

cause it will be just like livingin a home with a family. That

means a lot to an orphan, Richard

can tell you.He’s going to have his own

desk and bureau and closet for

his own clothes, and there’ll be

plenty of showers.

And will it be pretty! Rich-

ad’s heard that the walls will

be painted green and yellowand blue, and that there’ll be

a 40-foot window in each bed-

room and the draperies will

have teddy bears and lovelyflowers on them. And specialsize beds, with cowboys gallop-ing on the spreads.There’ll be playrooms with the

most interesting toys rockingboats, push carts, saw horses, andeven, drums and tambourinesenough to make up a real rhythmband.

Richard will only have to walkdown a hall to get to the class-room building, or the library, orthe beautiful bright chapel.There’s also a convent building,a nursery, an administrationbuilding, and an infirmary. Rich-ard heard Sister Dolorosa say it’swonderful that the infirmary isa separate building, because thena chiltPwho comes down withsomething can be quickly re-moved from the others so theyare less apt to catch it too.

There’s a fine big gymnasiumwhere Richflrd hopes one day toplay basketball, and a shop wherethe big boys learn how to to usetools.

RICHARD ALSO heard SisterDolorosa talking about how broth-ers and sisters who have beenseparated into two different or-

phanages will now be living un-

der the same roof again, andwon't that be nice. Sister said sheand the other nuns will helpthese children get acquaintedagain, and maybe a big girl willwant to drop in and curl her lit-tle sister’s hair sometimes, orhave a fudge party with her in

one of the snack rooms.Richard knows why St. Jo-

seph’s Village is being built—because the Sisters love him

and the other children. Theydidn’t want him to keep livingin the old home and eating inthe quonset hut. And they don’twant the little girls to stayin old Barbara Givernaud

Home, nor the big girls in the

city surrounded by factories.He knows the Sisters want all

the children together. He’s heardthem say, too, that money willbe saved this way, becausethere'll only have to be one heat-

ing bill, only one laundry, etc.

BUT HE’S HEARD that St. Jo-

seph Village is costing a lot of

tooney over $3,500,000. Andhe knows the Sisters are worried,a little about their bills. He’sheard them say how kind peoplehave been, and he knows of a lit-tle pamphlet which lists a lot ofthings people can give toward the

Village anything from a singlewindow shade to a whole room.

Richard certainly is glad theSisters didn’t wait until theyhad all those things before theystarted building the Village.Then the dream that will come

true within weeks would havehad to be postponed. Who

knows, maybe Richard would

have iiad to spend his whole

/ childhood in a quonset hut and

a crowded dormitory, if theSisters hadn’t been courageousenough to begin.Richard knows why the Sisters

are brave, too. He heard Sister

Dolorosa put it into words theother day.

“God knows we're trying to

save children’s souls,” she said."He’ll do the rest.”

Dreaming of his new home,Richard is sure of it.

THE PRESENT is a drab thing for the boys of St. Joseph’s Home, Englewood Cliffs.

Above, six-year-old Richard enters quonset hut which serves as dining hall, as Mi-

chael, 7, holds the door for him and Buddy, 6, follows up the wooden plank steps.Since the 1953 fire which swept through three floors of the home, the boys havebeen living in cramped quarters—the partially Restored original building and two

quonset huts. Some of them have sisters living at St. Joseph’s Home in the industrial

heart of Jersey City, or at Barbara Givernaud Home, North Bergen, a converted oldmansion inadequate for the care of children. Brothers and sisters who have become

strangers through separation will soon be reunited when the Sisters of St. Josephopen St. Joseph’s Village, Rockleigh, to care for the children in all three homes.

THE FUTURE is a wonderful thing—filled with trees and open fields and bright airy rooms. Joy and hope are

written on the faces of Richard and Sister Dolorosa as they walk down the road after their visit to the Village,soon to be their new home..

PLEASE HURRY, says Richard, as he lends a hand to workman Albert Pflugel dur-

ing a visit to St. Joseph’s Village, sprawling 17-building orphanage under construc-

tion. Also lending moral support for the speedy completion of the Village are Pa-

tricia, 5, of Barbara Givernaud, Joan, 13, of St. Joseph’s, Jersey City, and Sister Do-

lorosa, Superior at the boys’ home.

Son of Hitler Aide

Father Sparked Persecution,

Now He’s Going to MissionsINGOLSTADT, Germany

(NC) —On the desk of a semi-

narian who will soon be or-

dained stands a picture of the

man who was probably the

Church’s bitterest foe when

nazism reigned in Germany.The seminarian is Brother

Martin who went through theminor seminary here and is

now completing his studies at

the University of Innsbruck,Austria.

The man whose picture he

treasures is Martin Bormann

Sr., his father and once thedreaded chief of Hitler's Chan-

cery in Berlin. Next to his pic-ture stands a wood-carvedstatue of the Blessed VirginMary.

BROTHKR MARTIN will beordained in the Jesuit Church

of Innsbruck on July 26 Thusthe son of the man who was

chiefly responsible for the cruelpersecution of the Church in

Germany under Hitler will

•tone for his father by dedicat-

ing his whole life to the mis-sions.

The Missionaries of the Sa-cred Heart of Jesus, to whichhe now belongs, will assign him

to a station in the Belgian Con-

go soon after his ordination.

Brother Martin does not

know what happened to his fa-ther. Some say he lost his life

in May. 1945, while the fiercebattle of Berlin was raging.

Others claim he managed to

escape and now lives incognitosomewhere overseas. He was

sentenced to death by the war

crimes tribunal in Nurembergin absentia.

At any rate, Brother Martin

prays for his lather every day.He prays for his conversion and

for the peace of his soul.

BROTHKR MARTIN was

born in the suburb of Gruen-

wald near Munich on Apr 14,

1930. Hitler was his god father,as he was god father to thefirst boys of all his chieftains.

Martin was educated in an ‘‘or-

der castle” reserved to the

nazi elite and thoroughly im-

bued with nazt ideas.

Then came the collapse.Along with others who were on

the Allied search list, he es-

caped into the mountains and

eventually found refuge with a

Catholic farmer and his familyin the neighboring Tyrol,

There, under the influence of

his pious hosts, and under the

impact of the tragedy he hadwitnessed, he found his way tothe Faith

Now Martin Bormann Jr. la

preparing to offer his First

Holy Mass in memory of hiafather.

theAdvocateMay 24, 1958 11

ST. JOSEPH'S VILLA

-'BLAIRSDEN," PEAPACK, N. 4.

Ouest Houu for Woman and

Retreat Houta

Artlatie French Chateau of breatlvtaking beauty tn the Somerse' Hllla.

Ultra - modern faclUtiea. Healthful

climate. Excellent meala. Open year-round to Convaleaeenta. racatlonlata

and permanent gueita.

Retreats from September to June,

except the Thankaglvtng, Christmasand New Year's Weekends. Daysand Evenings of Recollection.

Directed by the Sisters of St. John

the Baptist. PEapatk 1-0)34 OIOS.

dm erne!

iiU*

'-mMM

designed by Robert Fellner

ond Mark J, Fursf

Triple Dresser Bose.

Top

.$lS*.OO$2OO 00

TV cobinet open

So, why the hustle ond hoste, Toke oil the time you ploose to designyour own bedroom with Top Deck TV (the better to see with). Linger oil*

the longer os you pkm the cobinet ... os o dresser, mtetable or

man's chest. No rush ... delivery by St. Patrick's Day, or in 6 weeks.

moderna ire route 4, paramus, h. j.

Use Our 90-Day Na Charya Plan

THIRD

MIAMI BEACH VACATION

JUNE 3 to 12 INCLUSIVE

Nine Days All ExpenseSponsored by

ST. ANN'S, NEWARK

$150.00 p*r f»r%on

RESERVATIONS and INFORMATION‘

Call Rectory or

ES 5-4258 - ES 3-0582

SAfITTUVM9STOUI

INVESTORS

SAVINGSA Sound Conservative Savings Institution

Current Dividend

3V4 % jsl

Incorporated 1926

MAIN OFFICE

64 Main St., Millburn, N. J.

BRICK CHURCH OFFICE UNION OFFICE

21 Wa.Mngton FI. 977 97? Stuyv.tanf Av«.

Eoif Orang*, N J. Union, N. J.

?!

Q

NfOOY

KILOWATT |

THE STORYIN A NUTSHELL!

“ElectricityDoes So Much

...Costs So Little

It’s probably the only item in your family budget

that costs less today than 30 years ago!

PVBLICdgbSEHVICE

Reviewing the New BooksThis* reviews

are compiled from "Best Sellerspublished by the University of Scranton,Scranton, Pa.

THE ACCOUNTING. By Bruce

Marshall. Houghton,' Mifflin.

S3.K. (Suitable for general read-

ing.)The legal profession has always

fascinated our novelists, and Ar-thur Winner of “By Love Pos-sessed” and Paul Biegler of “The

Anatomy of a Murder” are the

two most recent lawyers of mod-

ern fiction. If the certified publicaccountants have been searchinglong for a literary stylist, theyhave found him at last in BruceMarshall and possibly they' willfind themselves in his novel,“The Accounting.” Bruce Mar-shall is himself a chartered ac-

countant who practiced the pro-fession for some 14 years in Par-is between the first and secondWorld Wars.

Sir Eric Stugby-Wharton, theauditors’ senior London partner,is informed by the directors ofShinto and Dunsmuir’s Britishand Overseas Banking Corpora-tion that they have good reason

to believe that a serious fraud hasbeen committed in their Parisbranch. The precise nature of thefraud is not known nor can the

directors give any explanation ofhow long the embezzlement mayhave been going on. The Parisaccountants are determined tounmask this defalcation once ithas come to their knowledge be-

cause they reason among them-selves that auditors are watch-

dogs and not bloodhounds; but

chartered accountants who fall tofind a fraud when they have been

Upped off about it are like Sol-diers who neglect to destroy their

enemy on the field of battle.The company’s employes are

all poorly paid and their salariesare to be cut again by the firstof the year.

Each of the dissatisfied and

disgruntled underpaid auditors is

imprisoned in his own personalconflicts and desires and each in-

tends to,, make a success in un-

covering the suspected embezzle-

ment. Each becomes an individ-

ual private-eye searching for the

slightest clue among the ledgersand records, anaiying. the mer-

est lapsus linguae. Each pursuitis absorbing and only partiallysatisfactory as a solution as the

trail leads through many differ-

ent places both within and with-

out the bank. It is idle to saythat the boudoir is not neglected.

To divulge much more of the

narrative would be to deprivethe reader of a fascinat-

ing mystery that has a remark-

able denouement as it is told

by a competent craftsman and

gifted novelist. It will be an en-

joyable experience for every-

one to read.

PATTERNS IN COMPARATIVE

RELIGION. By Mircea Eliade.

Sheed and Ward. K.50. (Adults

only, because of advanced con-

tent and style.)This work by Professor Eliade

of the University of Chicago is a

translation (by Rosemary Sheed)of an earlier French edition. Pre-

sented as an introduction to the

history of religion, the presentvolume studies religious phenom-ena merely as hierophanies(manifestations of the sacred),while a companion volume now

being prepared will study such

phenomena in their historical

framework.

A book on comparative religioninsofar as it is a scientific in-

quiry does not concern itself with

the truth of a given religion. TheCatholic reader, however, will

find nothing in this book to cause

uneasiness. On the contrary he

may be enabled to see, in theauthor's words, “The whole reli-

gious life of mankind—expressedin the dialectic of hierophanies—-as simply a waiting for Christ.”

MY THIRTY-THIRD YEAR. ByGerhard A. Fittkau. Farrar,Straus A Cudahy. $4.50. (Suitablefor general reading).

Msgr. Gerhard A. Fittkau is

presently executive director ofthe American St. Boniface Soci-ety in New York, an organiza-tion devoted to assisting in the

spiritual care of millions of dis-

placed persons forced into a re-

ligious diaspora alien to their tra-

ditions, and served by mission-

ary priests who minister to theirscattered flocks out of knapsackand from makeshift altars. His

book, a biographical account ofhis 33rd year, tells why he has

so generously given his life to a

work whose importance is scarce-

ly appreciated here in the West.

In the Fall of 1944, he was ap-pointed pastor of his own home

parish at Suessenberg, a small

town in East Prussia. Hardly had

he arrived when the Russian

army swept through In its drivetoward Berlin, desecrating the

church, looting, raping and kill-

ing. The author and most of theothers in the parish were sealedin a boxcar and sent east intoRussia. After 21 days the survi-

vors arrived at the slave labor

camp in the Petchora section ofthe Soviet Komi Republic, whichstraddles the Arctic Circle northand east of Moscow, and heretheir ordeal began.

The fact that the events take

place during Father Fittkau’s33rd year and correspond rough-ly with the Liturgical Year,makes a good framework for

telling his story as one analo-

gous to the Passion and Resur-rection of Christ.

The whole story is one of per-sonal experience, while the wholerational plan of the Russian wayof doing things, if there be one,is left to the reader to guess.One wonders, for example, whythese uncounted thousands ofslaves are brought to camps forlabor on constructions useful tothe Soviets and yet .are so poorlyfed and taken care of—or why,

Inexplicably, Father Fittkau and

several hundreds of other slaves

are returned to Germany in box-

cars which pass, all along the

route, other trains carryingslaves to the very same camp.

This incredible story, thoughnot perhaps as stylistically pol-ished or detailed as some of the

many other horror stories of

slave camps that have been pub-lished since the end of WorldWar 11, is nevertheless far above

the other in its spiritual out-look. The reader cannot but be

frightened and moved with in-tense sympathy for those who

are made to undergo such an

ordeal.

The book also inspires hope,for there yet remain many

priests and religious who,stripped of church, convent,formal ceremonies, religiousgarb, and respect, yet persistin their vocations and admin-

ister to their fellow men, Indefiance of their communisn-

overseers, in these earthly pur-gatories.

New Book of SaintsPATERSON Stones ot near-

ly 150 brother and sister saintsAre told in anew book by Rev.►Martin P. Harney, S. J. publishedhere by St. Anthony Guild Press.

'High SchoolConfidential'May Ignite ControversyBy William H. Mooring

When “High School Confiden-ti*l” hit* the movie theaterswithin the next few weeks, pub-lic protests are likely to make the“Blackboard Jungle” controversyof three years ago seem like a

faintly remem- 1bered whisper. |

“High School

Confidential” is]about, dope ped-dling and ati

tendant immor-

ality in and

around our highschools. It stariRuss Tamblynwith John Drew!

Mamie Van Doren,Michael Landon, Diane Jergensand other favorites of the teenset.

To quote a studio source, it is

“based on the exploits of 'Texas’

Joe Foster, an under-cover man

for a Texas narcotics squad, who

exposed a campus dope ring backin December, 1951.” Printed un-

der "Teachers’ Nightmare” in a

national magazine, Foster’s find-

ings are saitf by a studio spokes-

man to have been “toned down,not exaggerated,” although con-ditions around the schools now

are much worse than in 1951.After seeing the film I find ithard to imagine how things could

possibly be worse than this storysuggests.

PRODUCER Albert Zugsmith,who filmed “High School Confi-dential” for MGM release, doesnot claim to have undertaken thejob as & public service. He does

say that he, his writers and di-rector have tried to show how

terrifying the dope habit has be-

come among students and hownefarious are the criminals who

peddle the stuff.'The film's message is clear,

even though It is sensationallydelivered. "If you play aroundwith the weed, you’re sure toend up on the hard stuff.” Ido not pretend to know wheth-

er this warning will help or

hop up youngsters.The screenplay does not, in

my opinion, violate rules in themovie code as to how the subjectof drugs should be treated. I

am reasonably sure, however, thatthe code administration and manymore responsible Hollywood pro-ducers must regret that storiesof this kind are ever filmed atall.

Many people, including somelaw enforcement agencies, say itis futile to ignore the spreadingmenace as a subject for commentin the press, movies, tv, radio

and other communications media.

The public good is better served

by telling the truth, the wholetruth and nothing but the truthabout this creeping cancer, theysay, / .

THE CRUCIAL question, it

seems, to me, is this. Do thelurid facts about the traffic, use

and effect of dope, when vividlyimparted by the movies, dispel or

excite human curiosity? Humannature being what it is, maynot the greatest danger of suchfilms lie in the fascination whichevil has for so many of us?

Ten North FrederickGood (Adults)

From John O’Hara’s novel,Charles Brackett and PhilipDunne have built a powerful, al-

beit disheartening drama about a

family, rich in worldly goods, but

bitter, frustrated and unhappyin spirit. The father (GaryCooper), honorable in politics al-

though finally less so in mar-

riage does not fully share hiswife’s White House ambitions.Their daughter makes a forcedmarriage with" ir trumpet-blower;their son takes to drink. The

wife admits to having a lover, butshows no love at all for herhusband or children. The hus-

band seeks consolation in an af-fair • with his daughter’s room-

mate. This the story more or legsjustifies by mere circumstance.

It is an unhappy tale, effec-

tively told and mightily wellacted.

God's Little AcreFair (Objectionable in part)

This dull, drab expurgation ofErskine Caldwell's dirty book con-

trives a few colorful character-

izations, notably that of the old

codger Ty-Ty to whom Robert

Ryan does ample justice. It is

difficult, however, to remain in-

terested in a whole communityof poor Southerners who, insteadof raising food, waste their livesdigging up the farm land for goldsupposedly buried by an ancestor,their only diversion being sen-

suality and lust.

This morbid mess draws strongLegion objections to “low moral

tone” and “glamorization of im-

moral actions.”s

FrauleinK

'

Good (Adults)

From a novel by James Mc-

Govern, this develops tender ro-

mance against a realistic and au-

thentic backdrop of terror and

devastation in Berlin at the close

of World War 11. An American

captain (Mel Ferrer) escapes a

prisoner convoy, takes refuge inthe home of a Jewish professorto whose daughter he is attracted.Later the captain rediscovers the

girl in a Berlin “dive.” She has

escaped from the communists inEast Berlin. Eventually their

marriage is threatened by herfalse registration as a prostitute,but a colored GI “corrects” the

record without the captain's

knowledge and a happy ending is

arranged.Although grim in parts, this is

good, if you.like war films.

New Catholic

Book ReleasesFollowing is a listing of new

Catholic books compiled by the

Catholic University of America

library.A Didactic of Morals, by Mortimer Jer-

ome Adler. Essays. reprinted fromthe Review of Politics, directed to-

ward the foundation of political phi-loeophy. (Umar. 83.50).

More Light en the Dead tea Icrella. byMiliar Burrows. A comprehensive re-

view of developments since 1955

when the author’s Dead Sea Scrollswas published. (Viking. $8.50). •

The taints, by John Coulson. A con-cise alphabetical dictionary accom-panied by numerous black and whiteillustrations and 16 in color. (Haw-thorn. 812.95).

Hely Paeans ef the Old Testament, byJean Danlelou. Aims to restore tothe Christian tradition, knowledge of

some people of note in the OldTestament who have been largelyforgotten. (Helicon Press, Baltimore.83).

Apostle of Brail I, by Helen Dominion.

A documented biography of PadreJose de Anchieta, missioner to In-dian cannibals. (Exposition •Press. t5).

•ulde for Parents ef Catholic Youth,by Msgr. Justin A. Driscoll. Principlesof parent-child relationship and dis-cussion of particular topics, such asrecreation, dress, dating, drinkingand smoking. (Dubuque ArchdiocesanBoard of Education. 90c. paper).

Father ef the Family, by Eugene S.Geissler. A reprint. (Fides. 81.25).

Lend Me Your Hands, by Rev. BernardW. Meyer, M.M. Reprint of essays inCatholic action. (Fides. 81.50. paper).

A Manual for Novice Mistresses, by Al-bert Pie. A translation from theFrench of conferences for Domini-cans. (Newman. 83.25).

Cenversation With Christ, by Peter f.Rohrbach. An introduction to. mentalprayer based on St. Teresa of Avila.A reprint. (Fides. 81.25. paper).

Stories for Sermons, by Arthur Tonne.The ninth volume of a series of an-ecdotes including topics of education,effort, encouragement, envy . andeternity. (Didde Printing Cos., Em-poria. Kans. 82. paper).

Church History, by Karl Bthimeyer. Vol.I deals with Christian antiquity to682; revised by Hermann Tuechle.(Newman. 88.50).

Whaf Ivory Bride and Broom ShouldKnew, by Harold A. Buetow. Instruc-tions on the nature of marriage.(Bruce. 75c. paper).

Addresses end Sermons, ItJI-IfIS, byArchbishop Amleto Giovanni Clcogn-anl. A collection of 40 talks: fifthvolume of a series. (St. AnthonyGuild. S3).

Our Life ef Orsce, by Francois Cuttaz.A study of the moral and mystical ef-fects of sanctifying grace, translatedfrom the French by AngeUne Bou-chard. (Fides. 86.85).

Cesmeleev, by Henry D. Gardeil. Secondvolume of his Introduction to the Phi-losophy of St. Thomas. (Herder. 83.75),

•rewind Up Together, editedby EugeneS. Geissler. A symposium on variousaspects of personality development.(Fides. 83.951.

The Catholic Way ef Life, by WilfredG. Hurley. Dogmatic explanations for

non-Catholics. (Paullat Press. 50c.paper).

Sacred Doctrine, by Edwin G. Kaiser.An Introduction to theology. (New-man. 84.50).

Shane- Carnes to Dublin, by PatriciaLynch. Juvenile story for ages 9 to12 of a boy who comes to Dublin tofind his uncle and la befriended by abookseller. (Criterion Books. 83.50).

The Blft ef «ed. by John T. McMahon.A discussion of the mission of the

Holy Spirit and aevotion to the HolySpirit. (Newman. 83.25>.

Thomas and the Physics ef ttSS. byHenry Margenau. The 1958 Aquinaslecture given annually at MarquetteUniversity. (Marquette UniversityPress. 82.50).

On the Philosophy ef History, byJacques Marttain. An analysts editedby Joseph W. Evans. (Scribner. 83.50).

The Ansels, by Pascal P. Parents.' Astudy of the spirit world. (Grail. 83).

The Spirit ef the Spanish Mystics, byKathleen E. Pond. An anthology ofSpanish religious prose from the 15thto t(ie 17th century stressing lesserknown writers. (Kenedy. 83.95).

Planning for the Formation ef Sisters,

edited by sister Rltamary. C.H.M.Studies on the teaching apostolate andselections from addresses of the Sta-ter Formation Conferences. 1956-57.

(Fordham University Press. 83.50).

Awakenlnns ef Souls, by Francis X.

Ronsln. Advice on moral, intellectualand social formation of children, ado-

lescents and adults. (.Society of St.Paul. Canfield. N. J. S3>.

Current Plays in BriefBy JoanThellusson Nourse, Ph.D.

New PlayComic Strip Heedless pro-

fanity mars this funny farce

about a LaGuardia era crime

scare launched by a little boy’sinnocent prank.

Aunflp Mama Tha marry Ufa ef a

Bohemian lady of tha *2oa. eomeUmea

recounted with risque humor and pro-fanity.

The Bella Are Ringing—Breezy must-eal about an Impulsive anawer-aerylee

flrl who can't help mothering hot m-enta. One ehOrna number rather skimp-ily eoatumed.

Blue Denim Competent tragic com-

edy about troubled teenagera and theirunhelpful parents. Includes some pro-fanity and tends to glamorize extra-

marital affair.Child of the Morning (Blsckfriars’)—

Clare Boothe Luce’s lively, auspensefuldrama of a young, modern Brooklynsaint. Notable for ealty characters, wittydialogue, action aplenty and sane spirit-ual values.

Children of Darkness Seamy melo-drama of knavish double-dealing withinthe walls of 18th century England’s New-gate prison. Well plotted but unedify-ing story of lUlcit lave.

The Crucible Powerful drama ol

tho Salem witchcraft trials. At tractafalnat Intolerance, seems somewhatover-anxious to susseit modern par-allels.

The Dark af the Tap ef the Stairs—Poignant drama of an lraaclble marriedpair Painfully groping toward mutualunderstanding. Includes some quite

candid discussion of marital intimacies.■ ndeame Garrulous, eccentric play

permeated with a pagan philosophy ofdespair.

The Firstborn Dynamic productionof Christopher Pry’s stirring dramaabout how .Moses, at God’s command,returns to Egypt to deliver his en-slaved people.

Garden District Two new shortplays by Tennessee Williams, sgainmorbidly preoccupied with perversion.

Jamaica Lively calypso vehiclefor song-stylist Lena Horne. Some cos-

tumes skimpy: some lyrics risque.Jane lyre Colorful, exciting ver-

sion of Charlotte Bronte's class ro-mance of the English governess and

the moody master of Thornfleld Hall.11*1 Abner RolUckina musical r*

creating the aaay. eccentric world of

Despatch. 0. g. a. Some Inadequatecostuming and sporadic risque bits.

Leek Back In Ansar A vivid start-ling Britlab play about a young mar-ried pair bitterly at odds amid thePleasures of post-war living. Includes

aoma obJactionibla llnaa, and frowaibut lightly upon extra marital lova. •

Look HggMward, Angal Strong,compaaalonatg drama of a sensitive

youth’a progreaa toward maturity. Ra-counte an unhappy Illicit lova affairwith nalthar moral condemnation nor

approval.Tha Music Man—Fresh, exhilarating

naw musical romance of 1912 lowa actto a snsppv Souza march beat. Finefor tha family.

My Pair Lady Brilliant melodic

adaptation of Shaw’s comedy shout thaCockney flowar-girl transformed by tha

professor of speech. Some low,and humor In aeenes featuring her

raffish father.New •Irl In Tewit Well-made

Broadway musical lighter in tone thanthe original, "Anna Christie." Tends totreat Immoral affairs with sympathetichumor.

Oh Captain Indecent quips andcostumes help scuttle the satiric musi-

cal sags of a sea going Lothario.

The Playboy ef the Western World

A rousing revival by the Irish Playersof Synge’s wild comedy of the shycountry lad boosted to popularity whenreputed a parricide. '

Romanoff and Juliet Light, whim-sical East-West romanceact In a myth-ical kingdom. Specializes In satiric digsat typical Russian and American foibles.

Bay Darling Uneven, moderatelyamusing comedy about the problems ofadopting a home-spun novel to a lavishBroadway musical. Some farce, somesatire, some dull spots and a few goodsongs.

Sunrise at Cameebello Strong, mov-ing drama about F.D.R.’s courage tn

overcoming the crippling handicap ofpolio.

Time Remembered Enchantinglove story In a fantastic French setting.Helen Hayes daUghta ass majestic butbalmy duchess.

Two far the Seesaw Clever, two-character comedy condoning illicit loveand relying heavily for humor upon

suggestive lines and situations.' Two Gentlemen ef Varans Beguil-

ing. Canadian production of Shake-speare's youthful comedy on the rivalclaims of friendship and love.• The Visit Starring tha Lunta. a

grim, harrowing European play aboutS' small town's act of mask treachery.Disturbingly reaffirms tha cynic’s creed

that every man has his price.West Side Story stock modern

"Romeo and Juliet" musical, set amidManhattan teen-gang warfare. Accepts

unorthodox "private" marriage and in-cludes much raw language.

Who Was That Lady I Saw You Wltht—Daffy farce with Peter Upd Hayes

faking an F.8.1. mission to Impresslealous wife Mary Healy. Art 1 goesIn for some racy marital quips.

Television Film RatingsThe Legion of Decency rated these films when they were first released. There may be changes

in soma, due to tests mad* wktn lb* films were prepared for television nse. Generally, however, the

Legion of Decency ratings btay be accepted as correct moral evaluations of these television films.

SATURDAY. MAY 14

I# 4.m. <S» Callin* Philo Vine* (Family)IS ■ in. <7l Kou'herner (Adultl. Adoleacenl*)Noon <I3) hi* ll< (Adult*. AdoloacenU)

II >0 p.m. Hi Force of Kvtl 'Adult., AdoleacenU)II so pm i#i Rhythm of th* Saddle 'Family)

l pm ill Good l.uck Mr Yataa (Family)

I 30 p.m. <IS> Torch lOhlaclionahl*)

t P.m. (SI Mirada of tha Rail. 'Family)3:30 pm. <3> Batty toCd (Adult*. Adol**r*nta<3:30 p.m. 11l Romance of th* Redwood* (Family)

3:30 p.m. (31 l.oneaome Trail (Family)

330 p.m <I3) Jiaaaw (Ohiectlonable)* pm. IS) Scared to Death (Adult*. Adoleacentai4 pm. (7) Pardon My French (Adult*. Adolearenlal

5 p m. ill) Red River Ranae (Family

3 pm (I3> Mr. Wtae Guy (Adult*. AdolearanU)

3 30 p m. (31 Good Girl* Go to Part* (Adult*. Adolaacanta)

330 p.m (3) Chump* at Oaford (Family)

0 p.m. It) Houae or Raven Gahlea 'Family)S pm. (13) Ruchahln Frontier (Family) *

1.30 p.m <l3> laknowo laland (AdulU. Adoleareala)

Ppm (13) Alatha iAdulU. AdoleacenU)10 pm Gl> Kiaa of Death (Adult*. Adoloacenl*)10 30 pa 113a Hi*h l.ene*ome (Family)II pm. 'D Horror laland 'Family

11:19 p.m.(3) H All lame True (Adult*. Adoleacentai

11 18 pm. («• Jubilee Trail (AdulU. AdoloacenU’

13 30 *.**. («> Outpoet la Malaya (Adult*. Adoleareala)

1.01 a m <3> Canal Zone (Family)

SUNDAY. MAY IS

10 am. ft) Rider* of Ute Deadline 'Family)I Pm (3> Return to Troaaure laland (Adult*. Adoloaroeta)

I* » m (S> RUncho Fury lObiecttenabloi13 30 a m. (*> La* Miaerakloa (Adult*. Adoleecoata)ISOS am.(3> Picture of Do nap Grey (AdulU. Adotaaeoata)

MONDAY. MAY SO

10 am <T> Bach Door U Heaven (Adult*. Ada la **«*!*>« Pm 'll) Lady Say* No > Objectionable)930 Pm (3) TwoFaced M eman (Objectionable)0 pm (0> I Oder Weetara Star* (Family'II Pm (1) than Maa (Adulta. ASalaaaaaU)UiU pm. (3) Pcemaiaa (Family)

13:90 a m. (3) l.auah Your Bluea Away (Family)TUSSOAY, MAY !!

10 a m . I SO p.m. >9) Sullivan* (Family)10 am. (1) Rack Door to Heaven (Adult*. Adolearenta)

3 30 pm, (|1) Intruder 'AdulU. Adoleacentai

330 p.m. <3) Parnell (AdulU. AdoloacenU)330 p.m. (A) Man With My Far* (Oblectlonable)

3 pm. (It) Glory at Sea (Family)0 Pm (S> Rlvepina Car to Trteat* (Objectionable)

11 p.m. <T> Wolf Man (Adult*. Adol*ar*nU>

11 IS p m <S> Nauahty Marietta (AdulU. Adolearonta)

1:10 a,m, (3) Lady From Shanshai inhlectlonabloiWSONSSDAV. MAY IS

10 am. 130 pm (3> Bia Naive (Family

10 a m (T) Baik Door to HeaveiyaAdulU. /kdoloecenu)33d p m. <ll > Tender Year* (Family)930 p m. (I> Old I.oa Ana*la* (Family)S3O P.m <Ol Miaa Rabin Cruao* 'Adult* Adolearonta)0 p m (SI Sprinatime ua th* Starraa (Family)

11 p.m (7) Wolf Man (AdulU. Adol**c*nu>

11 IS p.m. '3< Adam and Evelyn 'Adult*. AdoloacenU)

1:03 am. (3> Dakota 'AdulU. AdoUacenta) ,TRumd»», MAY M

10 a m. 130 pm. <3> Blackout (Family)

10 a m (T) Bark Door to Heaven (AdulU. Adoleerenta)

330 p m. It) Greet Den Patch lODtocUoaabte)

330 pm. HI) Utile FualUve (AdulU, Adeleeroot*)

4 p.m. til) Kill or Be Killed (Obtocuonabl*)

330 p.m (3> Cockeyed Miracle (AdulU. Adeteerotalot

0 p m. (»• Nlahttm* In Nevada (Fapatly)11 p.m. (7) Myatary of Mart* Raaot (AdulU. Adotooroola)IMS p.m. (3> Iroouol* Trail (Family)

13.SD a m. (3) Nana Shall (atop* (Adult*. AdelaaeooU)

FRIDAY, IRAY SO

It a m. (7) Dark Door t* Hoove* (AdulU. AdotoacooU)

530 pa (SI Whuporlot South v* Deadend Yard (Adult*.

S3D pm 'SI Man From Dow* Voder (Adult*. A dale aeonu:

t » m It) Sunaal la Rldorado (Faaaily)

t pm. at) Tale* of Moffman (AdulU Adetoacoota)

11 pm. <T> Myatery of Maria R***t Adulu. tdotemaaui

litisdas. <3> ladlanapokt Soaadway 'Adulu Ad*m*nnU‘

USD a-u (31 Moat tha Suwaru (Adulu <daloManu)

MOVIESMdW eating by the Mew York ettlen of the

National Leeloty at Decency wilt* «WW»*

lien at Motion, Picture Department. Inter-

national Federation at Catholic Alumnae.

tntertalmnent rating by william Mooring. Advocate m«vl* erttl«

•"•Outstanding '•"•aeelleNt ..♦•Deed' **•*» * V»«»b

l Morally Unobjectionable for EveryoneNEW MOVIES: Rooney; Snowfire; Thundering Jets; Young Land.

Abominable SnowmanAdmirable CrichtonAcross tha Bridge ••

All at Sea * .All Mina to GtvaAUUrator Named DaisyAmbush at Cimarron

Pass

Apache WarriorApril Love ••

Around tha Warld taEighty Days

Attaclc of tha PuppetPeople

Beaat of BudapestBeginning of tha EndBig Beat ••

Black Scorpion •

Bolshoi BalletBombers. B-Si ••

Bridge on River Kwai

Campbell's KingdomChase a Crooked

Shadow •

Chasing tha SunCole Younger, Gun- , \

fighter •

Country Music BoyCourage of Black BeautyCowboy ••

Crash Landing *

Crooked Circle'Damn Citizen *•

Deep Six •

DeerslayerDestination gft.OOO

Diamond Safari

Duel at Apache WeUEnemy Below •••

Enemy from SpaceEscapade In Japan

Escape from Red RockEscape from TerrorFace in the Night

Fort MassacreFrom Hell to Texae

Gentle Touch

Ghost DiverGhost of China SeaGiant Claw

Gift of Love ••

Girl Most Likely •

God la My Partner ••

Golden Age of Comedy

Gun Duel in DurangoGun Glory

Gunsfght Ridge *

Handle With Care ••

Hell Canyon OutlawsHigh Flight

HeU Ship Mutiny

Hired GunHong Kong Affair

How to Murder a Rich

Uncle ••

1 Accuse

International

Invisible Boy

It’s Great to Be Young

JacduellneJamboree

James Dean Story

Joe Dakota

Last Stagecoach West

Man from God's

CountryManhunt Jungle

Merry Andrew ••

Misourf Travelers ••

Mustang

No Time for Sergeants

OctetOld Yeller

One That Got Away **

Operation MadbaU ••

Paris HolidayPawnee

ei’errl •••

Persuader

Plunder RoadProud Rebel

Pursuit of Graf Spee "

QuantriU'a Raldera

Raiders of Old

California

Rawhide Trail

Return to Warbow

Ride Out for Revenge

Rising of the Moon ••

Rockabilly Baby

Run Silent. Run Deep •*

Sabuand the Magio RingSad Sack

*

St. Louis Blues ••

Search for Paradise

Seven Hills of Rome•••

Sheepman*•

Sing Boy Sing ••

Slim Carter

Spook Chaser

Stopover Tokyo

Story of Mankind *

Story of VickieSummer Love

Tan Command-menU ••••

That Night

This Is Russia

Three Brave Men *

Thunder Over TangierTime LockTin Star •••

ToreroTougheat Guy In

Tombstone

Town Like Alice ••

SO Million Miles to

Earth

Under Fire

Underwater Warrior* •

Up In Smoke

White Huntress

Windjammer

Wolf Dog

World Was His Jury *

Zero Hour ••

Morally Unobjectionable forAdults and Adolescents

NEW MOVIES: Camp on Blood Island; Robbery Under Arms;

Vertigo; War of the Satellites

Amazing Colossal Man

Astounding Sha MonsterAtttla

AwakeningBitter VictoryBlack TentBlonde Blackmailer

Blood Arrow

Break in the CtreleCareless Years ••

Cartouche

Case Against BrooklynCast a Dark ShadowCattle Empire ••

Chicago Confidential *

China GateCopper Sky

Count rive and Die ••

Cross-UpCry Baby KillerCurse of the DemonDalton GirlsDangerous Youth

Dateline TokyoDay of the Bad ManDeath in Small DosesDemonlaqueDino •

Doctor at Large •

EscapadeFlame Barrier

Flood TideFort Bowie

Forty Guns ••

Trench They Are ■

Funny RaceFrom Hell It CameFury at ShowdownFurry Pink Nightgown

Green Eyed BlondeGun Fever •

Gunfire at Indian GapGuns Don't ArgueHard Man

Hatful of Rain •••

Hear Me Good

Helen Morgan Stoty **

Hell on Devil's IslandHit and Run •

Hold That Hypnotist

Hot Rod GirlHot Rod Rumble

Hunchback of Notre

Dame

niegalIn the MoneyIron SheriffJoe Butterfly ••

Johnny Trouble ••

Journey to Freedom

Jungle Heat

Killer on the Wall

Kings Go ForthLand Unknown

Last Bridge

Legend of the Lost x

Line UpLisa

Lure of the SwampMacabre

Monte Carlo Story •

Murder Reported

My Man Godfrey •••

Naked in the SunNo Down Payment ••

Oregon Passage

Oklahoma WomanOutlaw's SonParson and the OutlawPaths of Glory

Quantei *

Quiet American •

Ralntree CountyRestless Breed *

Ride a Violent MileRock All NightRodan

Run of the Arrow,

Saddle the Wtnd ••

SafecrackerSaint Joan

Sayonara

Scotland Yard Dragnat

Sea WifeSeventh Sin •

She Creature'

She Played With Fire

Showdown at BootHill

Sinner

Slaughter on Tenth

Avenue

So Lovely. So Deadly

Something of Value **

Stakeout on Dope StreeiSuicide Battalion

Tall StrangerTaming Sutton's Gal

Teenage Bad Girl

3:10 to Yuma •••

Thunder Road

TiaJuana StoryTime Limit ••

Time to Love and a

Time to Die

Tip on a Dead Jockey

Triple Deception

Trooper Hoolf •*

True Story of Lynn

Stuart •

Unearthly

Unholy Wife ••

Unknown Terror

VampireViking Women and the

Sea Serpent

Violators •

WeapqnWink of an Eye

Witness for the

Prosecution

Woman tn a Dressing

GownYoung snd Dangerous ••

Morally Unobjectionable for AdultsNEW MOVIES: Frankenstein—l97o; Kathy

Adulteress

Another Ttme, Another

Place *BonJour Trlstesae •••

Brothers Karamaiov

Cabirla

China DollCool andthe Craay xCry Terror

Darby's Rangers ••

Desire Under the Elms**Fiend Without a FaceFighting Wild CatsFraulein

Gates of Paris

Gervalae

Glgl •••

Girl In the WoodsGoddess

Going Steady *

Haunted StrangerHell’s Highway

High Coatof Loving ••••

Lady Takea a Flyer •

Long Hot Summer ••

MaracaiboMarjorie Morning-

star •••

Muggers

Notorious Mr. Monks

OrdetOutcasts of the City

Peyton Place •••

R. X. Murder

Rouge Et Nolr

Seven Guns to MesaSouth Pacific

Stage Struck ••

Strange Case of Dr.

. Manning

Teacher’s Pet •

Ten North Frederick

Thu Happy Feeling

Time Without Pity

Too Much Too SoonTouch of Evil

Undersea Girl

Wild la the Wind

Young Lions •••

Morally Objectionable in Part for EveryoneNEW MOVIES: Attack of the 50 Woman; High School

Confidential; Mam’zelie PigalleAffair in Havana

Aa Lons aa They're

HappyBaby Face Nelson •

Back From tha Dead

Beautiful Hut Danger-ous

Black PatchBlonds in BondageBlood of Dracula

Bop Girl Goes CalypsoBride and the BeastBride Is Much Too

Beautiful *

Confessions of Felix

KrullCop HaterCurse of FrankensteinDecision at SundownDeep AdventureDesigning Woman •

Devil's GeneralDevil's Hairpin •

DisembodiedDomino KidDon't Go Near tha

Water •

Dragstrlp Ctrl

Dragatrip Blot x

1* and Anxious •

Escape From SanQuentin

Every Second CountsFare In the CrowdFarewell to Arms

Female AnimalFemale Junglereminds] the Dresa-

maker

Forbidden DesireFire Down Below •

*

Flesh and the SpurGang War

• Girl in Black StockingsGirls in Prison

Girls on the LooseGod's Little Acre '

Gold of Naples

Gunbattle at Monterey

Hell BoundHell Drivers « -

High Hell

House of Numbers ••

Invasion of the SaucerMen

I Was a Teenage

Frankenstein

I Was a Teenage Were-wolf

Island In the Sun '*

Island Women ,Jeanne Eagles *

Jallhouse Rock *

Jet Pilot •

Joker Is Wild *

Juvenile Jungle x

Kiss Them for Me •

Lafayette Escadrille •

Land of DestinyLast Paradise

Left Handed GunLea Girls ••

Little Hut xLive Fast. Die YoungLong HaulLost LagoonLove In the AfternoonLove Slaves of the

Amazon,

Machine Gun KellyMan in the Shadow ■*

Man of s Thousand

Faces •••

Mr. Rock and RollMy Gun Is. QuickNaked Africa

Ngked Paradise

1.000 Years From NowPajama Gama **

Pal Joey x ,Panama Sal

Panic in the ParlorParis Does Strange

Things

Portland Expose *

Portrait of an Unknown

WomanPride and the PassionRazxia

Reform School Girl

Screaming MlmlShort Cut to Hell •

Silk Stockings •

Sorority Girl

Story of Esther CostelloStowaway Girl

Sun Also Rises *

Sweet Smell of Success*

Tarnished Angels*Teenage Doll

Teenage Wolf-Pack

This Angry Age

Three Faces of EveTown on Trial

Until They Sail •*

ValerieWayward Bus **

Wayward GirlWill Success Spoil Rock

Hunter

Woman of the RiverYoung and Wild x

CondemnedAdorable CroateroaBamdK. The

Bed. TieBine Angel

Doth hi the Fie*

Desperate Women. TheFrench LineFrleFrse

Game of Lave

Glgl <Fr.)

Husband for AnnaI Am a Camera

Letters From UpWindmill

MitsouMoon Is Bine

Ne Orchids fee Mm

Blandish

One Summer adHappiness

Seven Deadly StasSins of tha Bergtaa

Snow Is BlackBon of SlnbadYoung and the Damned

AND GOD CREATED WOMAN (Fr.*Klngalgy) Objection: The theme*** ********* tMI film, developed in in atmosphere of sensuality, dwellwithout relief upon eugfestiveness in costuming, dialogue and situations. Intha field of motion picture entertainmentthe extent and intensity of theebjeetionability of thia picture constitute an e*en violation of Christian andtraditional morality.

Catholic Radio, Television

TELEVISIONSUNDAY, MAY If

Noon <7l Christopher Brniram.'’lmportance of News Writin*. Sir< adrlc Hardwicks. J. Carrol Nateh.

Noon (111 Bishop Fulton 1 Shaan.~Uh la Worth Urine."

1 30 pm. (4)—Catholic Hour. Story ofPeullst rounder,

WI ON I SO AY. MAY >1

T3O p m lilt Bishop Fulton J. Shaan.

’’Ufa la Worth U*tM ”

THURSDAY, MAY It

S pm. ill) T7»o ChristophersI pm Ul) Tha Christophers. ”10Steps to Batter Govsrnment.”

.

RADIO

SUNDAY, MAY SS

JIB a m. WNKW--Barred Heart.-YIS a* WRCA —Molar of Sc FrancisS a m WOR- Marian Theater.• «» a.m. WHTR—Hour of St FreedsOJO am. WCBS - - Peter and the Giftof Coureoe." Ho. Albert Bauman.O.S.R.

* WABC —Chrtatlaa in Action:’The < hristun >a Urn Satellite Ano."Ee.Fr.acis 1 Hayßaa. BJ. and Be.

emir. -The Maw.'* -

*»•?•’ W*CA - Catholic How.

“LowAon- Roe. Joseph *. Haaloh.

CSS.R.

030 pm. WMCA A.e Maria Hour."Tha Sixth and Ninth Command*mania."'

•30 p m WVNJ - Tha Uvtne Rosary,Rav. Paul A. Wlckana.

1030 pm. WCBS—Church of tho Air.Ranowal of tho Spirit." Very Be.,

Paul L O'Connor. S.J.

MONDAY, MAY ISS pm WSOU <FM) - Sacrod Heart

Proeram.

S:3O pm. WSOU <FM) Family Thao-

TUISOAY, MAY U

WIDNSSDAV. MAY ISS pm. WSOU iFlf) _ 81. Anna tieBaauprs

JMR. WBNX _ St. Stephen *eChurch. Neeene.

THURSDAY, MAY t«

ru> ~

»«OU <FIO _ Avo Marta

PRIOAV, MAY SO

<PM) Sacred Heart

V,‘js wwov - •*.

*

rill aos

W*N* Porpotaal Help

*£» In WSOU mo Hour of UrnCrucified.

12 THE ADVOCATE May 24,4958

SALES SERVICE• We Repair All Makes of •

TELEVISION, RADIOS

and AUTO RADIOSCO MPLETE LINE OF HI-FI and T. V/g by

ANDREA, DUMONT, HOTPOINTCONVENIENT TERMS ARRANGED

ESmx 2-0949

AILSBURG

W. J. SCHNEIDER, fnp.•1 MOUNT VERNON PLACE NEWARK 6, N. J.

m

BANK AUTOLOANS ARE

BEST/j

WATCH OUT FOR HIDDENHAZARDS m financing yournext ear. With a Bank Auto Loan

you know exactly how much you'llpay for financing. Get the facta.

HUDSON COUNTY NATIONAL BANKIN JIRSIY CITY

W.,hmtta. 11.

★ iatkaaa at Wi&m.aa A.a.

★ Cantral Ay. kh> Uwtti it.

W *•**•»« Ava. at Orav. it

N Jaataal tqwara

★ OMN MONDAY IVININO

IN lAYONNI

• IraaJway at Twaaty.Tlilrd tt.

IN ouniNiuoit **•*» It. at l.rf.nlma Ava.

IN NOtOKiN

it llvar at Pint tt.

• OHN FRIDAY IVININO

Mambar Fadatal D.poi t Imutnnca Corporation

HKjiK INSURE LOCALLY

At longat you livo

you will recolva a

OtPtNDAIII and

GOOD INCOMt H

you Inveit your

Io » I nf • In our

t V. D. ANNUITY

HAN.

• You alto ihare In

the proof work of

tf>• Mimom and kelp In

educating Frieiti and troth-

on for tho Mlniom • Car-

lain lax advantage! • A

lotting Memorial and re-

membrance In many Mouoi

andprayeri.

Write for free Information

Society Of Tho Divino Word

ANNUITY OlfT.

OItARD. MNNA.

A LOURDES JUBILEE INDULGENCEMAY BE GAINED BY PILGRIMS TO

OUR LADY'S SHRINE in Cap-de-la-Madelein* ..

.CANADA

0»! Mil 4-Jay intlujaa a »Iml la t*tn IHtINI

vl-V7' ,fSI »"«***•• Ifntfrtmii**. is Rmte. Ud Vina> #4<

CO” MO*(.« .J kaiwl

nC*6canPilgr—in Honors The BleatedMother17 Pilgrimages to CANADA-each 6 FULL DAYS n

BeginningJune2 and every Mondiy thereafter till Sept 22 me CZ )Z]To all th» t« I ST. ANNE DEBEAUPRE

'

BRO. ANDREShrinet | CAP-DE-LA-MADELEINE AND SACRED HEART

COSTV™'* 0 0°1 P' rir,P depending on date itledcd

*9500j includes 1$ meals. transportation, Lodging, Etc.

Weekend Pilgrimage* to Washington. D C. viaitmgHoly Land Monastery and Immaculate Conception Shrine.etc.

OCT.3-17-31-COST 13500 pertrip-include*5 mealt.Tr*n*portation,Lodging,ate.

Jll Froncj*contolgnmoq**kiq>nandt<*SMA»OAm ir- V'r- ii jin u nt^^yrifffrmflViritornJtw*fronciscon Pilgnmopt bemtit ourown From. von Ummry ,hColl, toon. NY.

For folder mith detoils on allabove Ngrtmoqt» Write or Phone.fATHtP ARNOLD F. BROWNo.m Front,toon MomnUrylSS W SISt NnbrklMYPtnn 0 46M

Knights of ColumbusPick O’Shaughnessy

ATLAI^ TIC CI TY—HiighP. O'Shaughnessy of Bergen-field was elected state deputy of the 46.600 Knights ofColumbus m New Jersey at the 62nd annual conventionheld here May 16-17. He succeeds Daniel L. McCormicknf Man pu/nnrt -—1of Maplewood.

Others chosen by the 300 dele-

gates were Joseph J. Carlin of

Moorestown, secretary; WilliamJ. Boman of Saddle River, treas-

urer; Chatles W. Gardner ofBoonton, warden; and Edward J.Patten of Perth Amboy, advo-cate. Msgr. Charles G. McCorris-tin of Woodbridge was reappoint-ed chaplain; his 29th consecutiveterms. The newly elected officerstake office July 1.

Mr. O’Shaughnessey joined theorder in 1920. A member of St.John’s Council, Bergenfield, heheld the office of grand knightfor two terms, followed by seven

consecutive terms as district dep-uty. He served the state council

as treasurer during 1954 and1955, and secretary from 1956 todate. *

THE FINAL session, held Sat-urday, started with delegates re-

ceiving Communion at the 9 a m.

Solemn High Mass at Star ofthe Sea Chufch. Following serv-ices the delegates paraded from

the church to the AmbassadorHotel, convention headquarters,where breakfast was served PastState Deputy Michael J. Doody

of Morris Plains, was the princi-pal speaker at the breakfast.

A resolution was adopted pro-viding for a gift of $50,000 tothe Seton Hall College of Medi-cine and Dentistry, Jersey City.

Most Sacred Heart of Jesus

Council, Wallington EJdwardSmith and Bruno Janeczko, pastgrand knights, will be honoredat a special ceremony May 25.

Newark Council—An exemplifi-cation of the major degree fora class of 70 candidates will beheld May 25, at St. Michael’s Ly-ceum Hall.' The final degree ofthe year, it will be conductedunder leadership of District Dep-uty William T. Griffith andGrand Knigbt Charles P. Doyle.

Benedict Council, Cliffside Park—The May 27 meeting will fea-ture a program honoring JackKelly for his work for the unit.He is delegate to Columbus Chap-ter and has served in many ap-pointive positions of the StateCouncil. There will also be an

exemplification of the first de-

gree, the class being named inhonor of Mr. Kelly.

Parcells Council, Chatham —-

The annual Spring dance will beheld May 24 at the Forum Club,Madison. Heading the committeeis John Duffy, activity chairman.

Shrine Transferred

FREIBURG, Germany (RNSI—A precious shrine containingthe relics of Blessed Bernhard,15th century. Margrave of Baden,arrived here from Moncalieri,near Turin, Italy, tp be displayedat various centers of the Archdiocese of Freiburg.

ON THE BOARDWALK: Some 5,000 participants and 60 floats from 80 parishes ofthe Camden Diocese joined in a three-hour march along Atlantic City’s famed board-walk in honor of Our Lady of Lourdes. More than 200,000 persons witnessed thegiant demonstration commemorating the 100th anniversary of the apparitions of Our

Lady of Lourdes.

Fordham AgainUpheld in CourtALBANY (RNS)—For the sec-

ond time in two weeks, the Courtof Appeals ruled against op-ponents of Fordham University’spurchase from the city of twoblocks in the Lincoln Squareproject at less than acquisitioncost.

In its latest action, the state’s

highest tribunal denied without

comment a motion by the plain-tiffs to stay the relocation oftenants in Lincoln Square, either

by the school or the other three

sponsors buying land in the 13-

block area.

Meanwhile, Harris L. Present,attorney for two groups of tax-

payers opposing the $205,000,000

project, who filed the stay mo-

tion, said he would ask the U. S.

Supreme Court on May 26 toreview the entire case.

Present warned that if tenantsin the area were'relocated beforethe area were relocated before

the Supreme Court’s ruling he

would “stir up a barrage of re-

sistance at every level.”

BE GENEROUS in contribu-

tions to charity. ,

Ordain Benedictine

Fathers on May 31NEWTON—Rt. Rev. Charles V. Coriston, 0.5.8 , Ab-

bot of St. Paul’s Abbey here, has announced that Rev. Mar-tin F. Rauscher, 0.5.8. and Rev. Damian J. Milliken, 0.5.8.,both of St. Paul’s Abbey, will be ordained to the priesthoodon May 31.

Father Rauscher will be ele-vated to the priesthood byBishop McNulty of Paterson inSt. John the Baptist Cathedral.Father Milliken will receive HolyOrders from Bishop James E.

Kearney of Rochester, N. Y., inSacred Heart Cathedral there.

FATHER RAUSCHER is the

son of Mr. and Mrs. Fred J. Rau-scher of 340 Whippany Rd„Whippany. He will offer his first

Solemn Mass at Our Lady of

Mercy Church, Whippany, at

noon, June 1.Rev. Michael Zarrillo, pastor,

will be archpriest and Rev. Pat-rick Bonnpr, 0.5.8., and Rev.Owen Hudson, 0.5.8., will be dea-

con and subdeacon. Robert Bru-no of the Benedictine Mission

Seminary will serve as master ofceremonies and Rev. Andrew

O'Sullivan, O S B , will preach the

sermon.

Father Rauscher entered the

Benedictine Mission Seminary in

September, 1950, after his grad-uation from Morristown HighSchool. He took his theologicalstudies at St. Mary’s Abbey, Mor-

ristown, and will attend the Uni-

versity of Munich, Germany, for

a year of graduate of work.

FATHER MILLIKEN is the

son of Mrs. Cornelius J. Milliken

and the late Cornelius J. Milliken

of Elmira, N. Y. Re will offerhis first Solemn Mass at St. Pat-rick’s Church, Elmira, at 11

a.m., June 1. Msgr. William J.

Brien, pastor, will be archpriestand Rev. Philip E. McGhan and

Rev. Francis J. Erb will be dea

con and subdeacon. Rev. Aloy-sius R. Clarke, 0.5.8., will serve

as master of ceremonies and the

sermon will be preached by RevLeo G. Schwab.

Father Milliken entered theBenedictine Mission Seminaryin September, 1946 He took his

theological studies at St. Mary’sAbbey, Morristown, and will con

tinue his studies at the Univer

sity of Munich, Germany

MSGR. HIGGINS writes on labor with the knowledge of an ex-

pert.

Father Rauscher

Father Milliken

Pray for Them

Fusehio Guala

HAWTHORNE- A Requiem

Mass for the repose of the soulof Eusebio Guala. 81, of 137 Ce-dar Ave , was offered at St An-

thony's Church here May 21. Hedied at his home on May 18Burial was in Holy SepulchreCemetery, Totowa

Born in Italy, Mr. Guala cameto this country in 1903 and livedin Hawthorne for 33 years Surviving are two daughters, includ-

ing Sister Mary Eusebio of St

Marys Convent, Passaic, andtwo sisters.

Mr*. OiarlcN MetzBRADLEY BEACH - A Re

quii-m Mass lofthe repose of thesoul of Mrs Charles J Meti, 30fiMonmouth Ave , was offered May14 in the Church of the Aseen

sion here. Celebrant was Rev jAquin Hankinson. OF M , a

grandson She died May 11

Mrs Metz lived in Irvington,prior to moving to BradleyBeach She was a member of theThird Order of St Dominic, St,'

Antoninus, Newark; the Rotaryand Altar Society, and the Moth-

ers Club, St Leo's, Irvington.

Surviving are her husband, jCharles J Meti, three son*, five :daughters including Sister Leonilda. .Notre Dame Convent, Ber !genfield, IT grandchildren, 27 Jgreat grandchildren and three

great-great grandchildren.

Indict Man

In ShootingTRENTON (NC) The

Mercer County grand juryhas issued an eight-count in-

dictment against Louis F.

Merrera who wounded three!nuns with a shotgun in his Apr19 shooting spree here.

The 24-year-old father of two,who told police he shot the Sis-ters because local Church offi-cials rejected his interpretationsof certain Bible passages, was

charged with seven counts ofatrocious assault and one for

grand larceny in connection withthe theft of a rowboat he usedin his flight across the DelawareRiver.

He surrendered the day afterthe shooting near Morristown,Pa. If convicted on all counts,Marrera could face a maximumterm of 52 years.

The three nuns, all membersof the Religious Teachers Filip-pini, were wounded when Mar

rera walked into St. Joachim’sConvent here and started firingA policeman and a passerby werewounded slightly.

Holy Name Giles

Louisville PriestNEW' YORK Msgr. Francis

J. Timoney, director of the HolyName Society in the LouisvilleArchdiocese, has been selectedfor the Father McKenna Awardby the Holy Name Society * na-

tional headquarters.

Presentation will be made byRev. Dennis B. McCarthy, 0.P., Inational director, on June 8. Theaward is named for Rev. CharlesH. McKenna, OP , who workedfor the spread of the Holy Name

Society throughout the UnitedStates from 1871 until his deathin 1917.

Msgr. .Timoney is being citedfor 32 years of work as archdio-

cesan Holy Name director.

Serrans Cautioned AgainstComplacency in Apostolate

SOUTH ORANGE - Compla-cency must be avoided by Catho-

lics in carrying out their obliga-tions as members of the layapostolate, Very Rev. Francis

Connell, C.S.S.R., of Catholic Uni-

versity told 100 Serrans last weekFather Connell was the princi-

pal speaker at the joint Commun-

ion breakfast-meeting of theSerra Clubs of New Jersey, held

May 17, at Seton Hall University.

STOO MANY Catholics, said Fa-ther Connell, think only of receiv-

ing the graces and other benefits

of the Church and do not realize

their obligations to do somethingabout the Church of which theyare a part.

He stressed the importanttask that the layman has in the

work of the Church by pointingup the values of human effort

added to the Divine Will of God.

Serrans must know their faithhe declared.

“To do this we must love God

and carry out the will of God.

We must do this to offset the shal-low ideologies which feature men

and metal spuniks in the heavens,yet ignore the God who created

tjie heavens and life itseli We

cannot depend on numbers alone

among 36,000,000 Catholics in the

U.S. We must depend on qualityas well.”

Catholics are obligated to ad-

vance the doctrines of Christ, hedeclared. This, he said is a par-ticularly significant responsibil-ity for Serrans who are dedicated

to the encouragement of voca-

tions.

MASS IN THE university chap-el was celebrated by Msgr. Wil-liam F. Furlong, archdiocesan di-

rector of vocations. Deacon andsubdeacon were Rev. William N.Field, chaplain, Serra Club of the

Oranges, and Rev. John F. Davis,

chaplain, Serra Club of Bloom-

field. The Serra prayer waa ledby Msgr. Edward J. Scully,Paterson diocesan director of Vo-

cations and chaplain, Serra Club

of Paterson.

Toastmaster at the breakfastwas Vincent A. Cunningham,president, Serra Club of Ridge-wood.

There were brief greetingsfrom George H. Smith, district

governor of Serra, and J. RayJordan, vice president, Berra

International.

Thanksgiving was- offered byRev. John J. Cassels, chaplain,Serra Club of Ridgewood.

Oratory Plans

New BuildingSUMMIT—A building fund din-

ner and dance was held by the

Oratory School Fathers’ Club,May 21, at MayfairFarms, West

Orange Principal speaker was

Msgr. Jbhn L. McNulty, presi-dent of Seton Hall University.

Rev. John J. Bain, headmasterat Oratory, has announced that

ground will be broken in Septem-ber for a new unit composed of

a gymnasium and several class-

rooms.

Gerald Fusco and George S.Carse were dinner co-chairmen.

May 524, 1958 THE ADVOCATE 13

Asphalt Drives

Parking AreasAS LOW AS 12c SO, FT.

All TYPES Of MASONRY WORK

FREE ESTIMATESAll WORK GUARANTEED

Consolidated AsphatConstruction Cos.

NUtlay 2-5047 - 2-5092

oil h&t satisfaction/

SINCE 190?

FUEL OIL and BURNER SERVICEPETROLEUM HEAT AND POWER COMPANY OF N J

972 BROAD STREET, Ncwork, N, J Ml 2-8130

With Steal rainforcad pourad concrete. 11" coping •«*

ond ladder. 12'x26' —3 to 5 feet deep* I JL Installed

Buster Crabba Do-It-Yourself or Custom ts AAP

Built vinyl lined Pools from *IUVJond U P

BER-MOR SWIM POOLS411 EAST McFARLAN ST., DOVER, N. J.

FOxcro'ft 6-0447 PReicott 8-6972

SUNRISE

BEACHON

BARNEGAT

BAYFrash Salt Tang of thg Opan

Sea . . . Scant of Ping ... A

Vacation Horn* for Happy Sum-

mar Actlvitias such at Boating.

Swimming, Fishing . . . and a

Havan for EvantualYaar-Raund

or Ratiramant Living.

75 FT. WIDE

WATERFRONT

LAGOON LOTS

LARGE WOODLAND LOTS $l5O down, $l5 Mo.

2 and 3 BEDROOM RANCH HOMES

Finished Homes Solid Year-Round Construction

SHELLS from..

.*2,645 Open 'til Dark

m

Rt 9, P.O. Box 171, Forked River, N.J. MY 3-3921

DIRECTIONS: Garden Slat. Pkwy. la Forked River Evil No. 74, turn left

at end of exit and go 2 mil.* to blinker at Rt 9, turn left en Rt.

9, go VS mile to Sonrite Beach. OR: From Tom* River Sooth en Rt. 9,

ga9’S mile* to Sunriie,Beach.

SUSSEX COUNTY'S

FASTEST GROWING COMMUNITY

All Yoar and Summer

Country Atmoephoro with City Conv«ni«nc#i

Club Plan

Adjacent to Schools and Churches

Parochial and Public

Only -3 miles from the new Our Lady of the lake

Regional High School

1 Mile from D.I.&W. Railroad

BATHING, BOATING, FISHING AND TENNIS

LOTS, HOMES and RENTALS

Lake Lenape Propertiest . . 04 tie# an Saoeh Opan Doit*

ANDOVER 3701 ANDOVER, NEW JERSEY

Dtvuorm - lunom

See Mr. William H. loVigne er Mr. Raymend C. LaVigne

rCUSTOM-BUILT KITCHENS

TBPPOn 1BUILT-IN OVENS

LOMBARDI CABINET CO.

141 lELLEVILLE AVE. lELLIVILLE. N. J. 1

PLymoufh 9-3294 angnj

• SINCE 1892 • <

SCHRECK &WAELTY

SNOW GUARDS - VENTILATING

RPOFING and

SHEET METAL

NIXAUTE - Bird Barrier

LIGHTNING RODS

25-27 HAGUE STREET

JERSEY CITY 7,-N. J. >• Oldfield 9-4068 *j

• HOME REPAIRS •

Carpentry Masonry Painting

JOE GOLDENBUILDER and

GENERAL CONTRACTORKENILWORTH. N. J. BRidg* 6-918739 N 22nd STREET T.l, BR.dge 4.49,4

wNt0 COMMUNITY '—‘LEONE BUILT

Silver bay pointON BARNEGAT BAY

(Off R». 549) TOMS RIVER, N. J.

Hor# it p«rf*ct vacation y#or 'round or

rolaaod rotiromont living offering tho

finost bathing, boating, fifthing and crob.

bing for which th# iarnogat Bay aroa

it to justly famous. Churchos and shop-

ping aro within a f«w minutos drivo ond

school bus transportation is avoilobfo to

Toms tivAr » oicollont schools.

BUY NOW...BUILD LATER

CHOICE BAYFRONT,

LAGOON AND

WOODLAND PLOTS

is A MONTH

AME* SMALL DOWN PAYMENT

CITY WATER

NOWELLS

VISIT OUR 2 A

3 BEDROOM

MODELS

TERMS

Wn»« of CollUn)or lor

mi

llluttrolod Brothuf

SILVER BAY POINT

SllVlt BAY BOAD

TOMS RIVIB. N. 1

TO B-MA*

I ft LIONS»Alt LAWN, N. i.

SW MMO

SUMMER YEAR ROUNDDUUCTKINa OorOom Rum Park»•» *• ft»»« Pi! crniUmM .lr.i.M

nil Ml. Nmmi An•cotUmmlmm ol Rl MR', lu,« Mft

•M Urn Bu PYMM.

RENTALS AVAILABLE

LAKE MOHAWK

JOSEPH F. MURPHYREAL ESTATE - INSURANCESALKS _ fIK.NTAI.S HI'II.DKHS

BO* in

L

af KE “ OHAWI< ‘"5

BOX 1041 f SPARTA N J

NO MONEY DOWN!WATERFRONT HOME SITES1% AT JERSEY SHORE'S LAGOON PARADISE

J Mills SOUTH OF POINT PIEASANT

V)

0

ON BM*neGAT b*Y

BUY

BUILD

OSBORNIVIIII

I BRICK TOWNSHIP, N. J

Your Soathoro

_

Lot Now

Your Droam

Homo Later

0 0

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Young Advocate Club to SponsorWhite Shoe WeekBy June Dwyer

THIS IS WHITE shoe weekat Young Advocate Club head-

quarters, at least that’s what

we are going to call it. Thealder boy? and girls might getthe point better if we called itwhite buck week and the young-

er Girls, getting ready for that

all-important First CommunionDay, might prefer to call it

white'MaryJane week.

Whatever your choice we’retalking about white shoes—anytype—that go on feet that walk

—anywhere*.There is nothing so clean-

looking as anew pair of whiteshoes. Then .there is that firstsmudgi. The one you mighthave gotten going back into

your pew after receiving yourFirst Holy Communion; or the

one you got when you trippedgoing up the stairs.

Somehow that first smudgeIs the worst. After that, no mat-

ter how hard you polish or no

matter how much effort youput into it, the shoe Just doesn’tlook quite so white.

Then, of cousse, as the shoesstart taking on the shape of

your foot and you start bump-ing doorways, and scuffingalong on steps and falling while

playing, you find the smudgesgetting bigger and bigger and

the shoes getting dirtier anddirtier.

There are some people who

can wear their shoes as theywalk and play for miles and

they still seem to stay clean.

And then there are those who

can’t seem to keep that beauti-

ful white finish more than a few

minutes.

JUST FOR THE SAKE of alittle thinking, let’s pretend that

those white shoes representyour soul. It doesn’t matterwhat type of a person you are—-

whether you are going to re-

ceive your First Holy Commu-nion or whether you are in the

seventh or eighth grades—who-ever you are, we’re talkingabout your white soul, and

where it is going.There is nothing In this world

or the next that is so brightand clean as a pure new soul.Then there is that first smudge—the once you received from

your first parents, Adam and

Eve.

Somehow that first smudge is

the worst because it weakened

our wills and makes us easier

targets for the dirty smudgesof sin. But from here on thereis a difference. God has givenus a polish that can do a nice

job of cleaning up our souls.

It’s true that for most of us the

soul won’t have the “brightnew look” until we get to Heav-

en, but we can have that “al-

most white” look. The polish ofGod is called grace. Sometimes

it is the grace of the sacra-

ments—sometimes it is an actu-al grace from God. \

THEN OF COURSE as the

soul starts taking on the habits

of your personality and youstart bumping along in life, go-

ing from temptation to tempta-tion, you may find the smudgesgetting bigger and bigger. But

then again, you may find that

this polish of God also helpsyou to avoid temptations and

to, avoid ( those things which

might bring smudges to. yoursoul.

There are some people who

can take their souls through a

whole lifetime and still keepthem clean and shining. Andthen there ar« those who can’t

seem to keep that beautiful

white finish more than a few

"years.

But the trouble with this com-

parison is that you can throw

away a dirty pair of shoes—butyou can never throw away yoursoul.

You must suffer for ev-

ery smudge you have. The Al-

mighty Soulmaker will not letyou into Heaven until that soul

has the same bright finish thatHe gave to Adam and Eve be-

fore their sin in the Garden of

Paradise. And if you refuse to

put on the polish of grace while

you are living, your soul will

remain in the discarded halls

of hell. '

So, Young Advocates, let’s

keep those souls pure and

clean.

A Column for Growing-ups

Irish JinglesBy Norah Smaridge

IRELAND MAY NOT have as many great poets as

other countries, but no country has so many versifiers, song-makers who glorify their own particular part of the land.

Ulster, for instance, has rhymes and verses to commemo-

rate every district, and some are well-known far beyond itsboundaries.

Most of nothern Ireland’s local

rhymes make a point of praising—or gently poking fun at—the

inhabitants ■ of particular towns

Derry, for in-

stance, is known

for its neat and

well-kept townsand villages,and also for

its pretty girls,,of whom it iswritten:

“The sweet

girls of Derryare comelyand merry."They’ve lips

like cherry and teeth like the

snow.”

One pretty village, where thefolks are thrifty is described as:

BouT Cushendall where the

praties are small

And the folks eat them skinand all.

“Praties” or potatoes are of

course a staple dish all over Ire-land.

IN “SWEET COUNTY DOWN”stands the ancient cathedral townof Dromore. (Here we find a rath,one of the mysterious earthen

mounds often seen in the Irishcountryside. Supposed to have

served as public stocks, they may

have been the place where Sab-

bath-breakers were punishedfor one poet writes:

Sweet Dromore, where theykeep no Sunday

And every day’s like an East-

er Monday!Armagh town, the ecclesiastical

capital of Ireland, has two cathe-

drals, each the seat of an Arch-

bishop, which explains the follow-

ing. not-too-fUttering local verse:

High church, low steeple,Dirty streets and proud

people.

Armagh is also mentioned inanother connection in:

Keady for kittens, Armagh for

cats,

Dungannon for pigeons and

Newry for rats.

COUNTY TYRONE presentsthe visitor with beautiful sceneryin rich variety, and with a kindof limerick which rims:

There was an oul’ woman wholived in Strathbane

She hadn’t a tooth in her headbut wan

She tuk up her porridge wi’ a

long wooden spoonAn’ she was the lass who cud

lick it up soon.

Perhaps you poets would liketo try verses about your own

neighborhood —and see if youcan beat the Irish?

Lives of the Saints

Warrior of GodThis week’s saint has an hon-

or that few others have—he is

also an angel. In fact, he is one

of the highest angels in Heaven—he is St. Michael the Arch-

angel.The Bible history books tell

us about the creation of the

angels in Heaven. They were

v/ry powerful and very happyuntil one day some of them

started thinking that they were

as great as God. The angels,led by Lucifer, which means

light, started to rebel againstGod. But they didn’t get very

far.

The good angels led by the

mighty Michael with a fiery■word battled under God’s

name. They defeated the bad

angels and drove them from

Heaven into the fires of Hell.

These bad angels became

devils and Lucifer is now

known as Satan, the chief devil.

St. Michael is portrayed byGerard Bukowski of St. Mi-

chael's, Lyndhurst, which is

staffed by the Felician Sisters.

St. Michael's feast day is Sept.29.

These bad angels, as devils, are

still trying to get even withGod for sending them to Hell.

Every day they tempt human

beings and try to make them

sin so 1 they too will be kept out

of Heaven.

After his victory, St Michael

became the captain of the

heavenly host the chief of the

angels in Heaven.

THE OLD TESTAMENT

speaks of Michael often. The

prophets asked him for help in

their great troubles. And thetribes called upon him for aid

iri battle when they Were fight-ing. \

In our own day, Michael hasbeen named the patron of the

sick, the protector of soldiers,the patron of grocers, of

knights and of modern radiolo-

gists. He is usually seen with

his sword and shield. Some-

times there is a dragon, rep-resenting the devil, at his feet,while other times there is a

banner, representing the ban-

ner of God, flying by his side.

We should pray to Michael to

give usthe strength to win over

our temptations. Though Mi-

chael defeated the devil in the

battle of Heaven, he is still

ready to help us fight that same

devil everyday in our tempta-tions.

St. Michael, warrior of God,pray for us.

St. Michael

Academy of St. ElizabethConvent ttetlen. New Jiruy

Secondary School for glrli. Vfth year,

teiident and Day. Ixeeptional record

for college preparation. Vocational

courier, Muilc, Art, Dancing, Dramatici.

Sporti and Activity program.I Information: JEfferion f-tAOO

Parents' News

Wharton Has

May FrolicSt. Mary’s, Wharton A May

Frolic sponsored by the School

Guild will be held in the school

auditorium and cafeteria May 29

at 9 p.m. Mr. Larry Sporik ischairman of the program whichwill include dancing, entertain-

ment and card playing.

Sacred Heart, Clifton TheMothers’ Guild will sponsor a

cake sale for the benefit of the

school May 24 after all of the

Masses. Mrs. Frederick Kowal is

chairman of this final fund rais-

ing project of the year. Mrs. Car-

mine Del Core is co-chairman of

the Mothers’ Guild.

St. Joseph’s, East OringeThe PTA elected Mrs. Merle Pec-carelli president recently. She

will be assisted by Mrs. Jean

Arace, John Zipp, Mrs. Marie

Abramo and Mrs. Marie Licari.

They will be installed at theJune meeting.

Holy Family Academy, Bay-onne The Mothers' Auxiliaryheld a Mother-daughter Commun-ion breakfast May 18 in St. An-

drew’s School. Mt*s. Fidelis Wang-ler was chairman assisted by Mrs.

Timothy O’Mahoney.

Graders try to Speak RussianWASHINGTON (NC) More than 100 fourth grade

through eighth grade pupils at a suburban parish school

here are now taking an after-school course in the Russian

language.The 10-week program, due to end in June, is being held

at St. John Baptist de la Salle

School in Chillum, Md, and has

won the praise of school officials,parents and pupils.

Msgr. Spence said that four

factors prompted the experiment:• “To demonstrate the willing-

ness of American youth to tacklemental discipline and hard workinvolved in mastering a languageof different script and alphabet.• "To meet tomorrow’s need of

being able to communicate with

people’whose numbers and influ-

ence dominate such a large por-tion of the earth.• "To seize the post-sputnik ef-

fect on our awakened American

populance as an occasion for test-

ing and popularizing the teachingof a foreign language on the ele-

mentary level.

• “Latin, French, Spanish and

German are already taught in our

secondary schools as part of the

curriculum.”

14 THE ADVOCATE May 24,1958

CAMP D.ELBARTONMORRISTOWN, NEW JERSEY

Day Camp for Boyt Conductor! by tho Benedictines

Samom June 23 - Auguit 1. Six wmli of supervised activities for boytfrom tlx to fourteen. Archery, tennli, twimmlng, artt and crafts. Experi-enced Countelort. Redden* regltlered nune. Attractive waterfront and

picnic area on wooded camput. limited enrollment, for details write:

Director Camp Delbarton, Morristown, New Jersey or phone JE 8-3231.

CAMP ST. JOSEPH'S VILLApo® BOYS Completely Staffed by Xavorlan Brothers

The beat you are looking for In Health

Sanitation Supervision Recreation

UNIQUE SWIMMING POOLOpen Air Theatre Roller Skating Rink Vast Ball Field

Pioneering Home Cooking and Bakery

INSPSCTION INVITED FROM MID-APRIL ON

_ ...

Weekly Rstesi US Season Ra»e> SSISBeektngs for S-S-f Weeks—Season from June IS te Aug. IS—Aees s-14

For Information and Direction. ConaultNew York Office! R». Rev. Msgr. John J. McEvey

W lost Urd *♦., New Verb H. N. Y. Tell MUrray Hill MIH

DOMINICAN BOYS CAMPSTAATSIURO, N. Y.

LOCATION: 258 acres on Hudson...tl mi. N. of N.Y.C.

HOUSING: Now (1958) dormitories, each with own lava*tories and hot showers.

COUNCILLORS: XAVERIAN BROTHERSAll SparH .

. . Swimming Pool. .

. 100'aSO'SIASONi July 1 to Augud 24th (S Wookt)

>ATMI Ml *•«*•" IMS; Half laaion $l4O.WRITI: Rev. H. R. Barron, O.P.

•49 Lexington Ave„ N. Y. 21, N. Y.PHONI: RHlneiander 4-2080 (4 to 8 P. M. ONLY)

CAMP ST. ANDREW PENNSYLVANIA^'Scranton Dlocotan Camp for Boyt

Smmii: June 28 to Aug. 23 $3O Wook

2 Priests 65 Seminarians

Any Gamo a Boy Wishes to Play-All Land & Water-SportsTobogganing - Speed Boating Water Skiing

WRITE: REV. THOMAS J. CARLIN300 Wyoming Avenue, Scranton 3, Pennsylvania

Telephone: Scranton, Diamond 4-3141

CAMP ST. BENEDICTNIWTON, NEW JKRSKY - 50 MILES FROM NEWARKFor toy* 7-15 • J uno 22 - Aug. 24 • $4O put week

Conducted by Benedictine Monks of St. Foul's Abboy$340 PER SEASON

ftMfdcirf Prhttii Sagktarad Nuria; laminar ianCauniallari; Madamfaci/itiai; Cabini; (il.niiv. Property; All Sporti, frivol. toU;

Mama bat* Siding. Siding. Sillary. Saglitarad by N.C.A.A.

lIMITED (NBOUMtNT - Wrlta far Iraebura to;W. JAMES CRONIN, 0.5.5., CAMS ST. UNIDICT. NIWTON. N. J.

IT'S CAMPTIME!

Lobelsv.

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GET THE YOUNGSTERS READYI

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CAMP UNIFORMS AND ALL THEIR CAMP NEEDS.AT "EASY ON YOUR BUDGET" PRICESI

YOUTH 4EXTER"Where Young America Shops"

THEWS A 101(1 STORE NEAR YOU

HACKENSACK

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Ymng Advocate Club

World’s Fair ContestThe Young Advocate Club is going to join in the fun of the

World’s Fair which is being held at Brussels In Belgium this year.Seniors (Fifth to eighth graders): Make up in word or art

a project that you would like to see Addie enter at the World’sFair from the Young Advocate Club. It may be a building, a

statue, a picture or anything else creative that would show otherswhat our club is doing.

Juniors (Kindergarten to fourth graders): Color the picturewhich shows Addie at the World’s Fair in Belgium.

Rules: Entries should be sent to: June V. Dwyer, YoungAdvocate Club, 31 Clinton St., Newark 2, N. J. Your entry makes

you a member.

Entries must be in The Advocate offices no later thanWednesday, June 25, 1958.

All entries must be accompanied by the attached coupon,or by a copy of it

m(Clip and attacMo'your letter)

IName Grade....

1

. * Address.. '.*

i'V' „• • I1

City ,i

gSchool •

I Teacher

i I am a member □ I would like to join □

—CAMP NOTRE DAME•N THI FOOTHILLS OF THS WHITS MOUNTAINS

♦- NEW HAMPSHIRE

BOYS - Aget 6 to 16 - GIRLS

SBASON JULY 1 to AUOUST »

Prt SMion WNk Opens June 14

Finest Equipment Beautiful Waterfronts Mature Supervision

Modern Cabins and Sanitary Facilities ,Physician In Attendance J- Balanced Meals

Resident Chaplain and Registered Nurse at Each Camp

'

FRSI BOOKLET

(Bays) Writs (Olrls)

JOHN E. CULLUM - MR. and MRS. L. T. FELL

CAMP NOTH DAMS

CAPITOL BUILDING. UNION CITY. NSW JIMSY

Phone UNlen 1-IS4O If ne answer Call UNlen 4-1111

, CAMP ALVERNIA for GIRLSMOUNT tT. FRANCIS. RINOWOOD, NSW JSRSSY

The Camp constitutes 130 acres oI heavy woodland and hilla of tha

Ramapo Mountains. Surrounded by picturesque beauties of nature. It

la an Ideal place for Stria of today to spend their leisure time,

twlmmlne. Sorting, Basketball. Hlklna, Honseback Riding, Gymnastics.

Camp Fires. Music, Dramatics, Volley-Ball, Bicycle Rldlne, Movies,Roller Skatins and Television, Arts and Crafts, Indoor Games for

Rainy Days, etc.BBASON: JULY 4 to AUG. 14 (tlx Weeks) AGIt Ste IS

415 per week—4llo per season. 4)4 Reolstration Fee (New Campers Only)

CONDUCTED BY CAPUCHIN 414T8R4Write: RIV. 414T8R DIRECTRE44. Phene Ersklne Lake 410,

between 1:10 and 4 p. m.By Automobile About 45 miles from George Washlnoton Bridge

Camp St. John’sA LAKESIDE MOUNTAIN CAMP

~

Boya 6-14, 9,300 ft. alt. Sandy loach an Huntar Lako. 100 milt* front N.Y.C.

Modern buildings. lavatory In each cabin. Hot showers. Excellent meals. Diversi-

fied activities, recreational and instructional. Mature, professional teachers and

coaches from top-ranking colleges and prep schools. One counsellor for every

four boys. Jesuit Chaplain. One all-inclusive fee. Catalog.

Write! Robert X. Oeigengack, Yale llniv. Athletic Ass'n, New Haven, Conn, Of

phono ORogon 7-7007 (N.Y.C.); Volley Stream 3-1 UR (long Island)

*+*v .33

-I

OUR 29»h SEASON

CAMP DON BOSCONEWTON, NEW JERSEY

Catholic Camping At Its Best

★ 8 WEEKS-JUNE 29 to AUG. 24★ All Land Water Sports ★ Riding at no Extra CostA Rifle Range for Senior Boys^

* Always open for inspection

y $3O Week - $230 Season

»\J Boys 9to 14

COMPLETELY STAFFED BY THE

Salesians of St. John Bosco

Write for FREE Booklet J

Private Lake

CAMP WAHKONDALAKE KATRINE, NEW YORK

7 MiUt north Kingston, Now York

July 1 - August 25 BOYS 5-14 YearsSEASON $375 2 weeks $lO4

* Horsoback-riding optional at $3.00 par wook(conducted by tho Amy Snydar Stabler)

Resident Chaplain Tutoring in Alt Subjects

WONDERLAND FOR BOYS

Summer full of memories tightly-packed program of ad Sports

Write—

CAMP WAHKONDA„ Telephone

.«/a E. S. McCann, Sponsor11 East 74th Street SUtterfield S-4119

New York 31

=VISIT AND SEE FOR YOURSELF-

CAMP ST. REGISEAST HAMPTON, l. I.

For GIRLS Ages 5-18

For BOYS,

Mil* long sandy b*ach on Shelter Island Sound, surrounded by mll*s of

virgin forest. Clear, safe. Salt Water Swimming, Sailing, Horseback Riding,Crafts and all sports. Modern facilities and equipment. Tutoring available.Leading staff composed of mature, experienced experts In, the campingfield including Helen Duffy, Director Physical Education, Notre Dam*

College for Women; Ed, Danowski, former Fordham Football Coach; Frank"•o" Adams, formerly Fordham Basketball Coach; Don Kennedy, Directorof Athletics and Basketball Coach, St, Peter's College.

Jesuit Chaplain • Private Chapel * Medical Staff

Season $450.00 Tuition Plan

Write or Pitone for Jnformatlon

VISIT AND SEE FOR YOURSELF

DON KENNEDY

Lower Cross Road, Saddle River, N. J. DAvis 7-1479

9

:

For BoysAges

8 to 16 Yrs.ImUml Priest

Trained Counselors

PLANNED PROGRAM

BEAUTIFUL WATERFRONT

SCREENED CABINS

SIMMONS BEDSAD Redding and Blankets

Furnished

EXCELLENT FOOD

7958 CAMPING SEASON

Periods

No. 1 - JUNK 29th to JULY 12thNo. 2 - JULY 13th to JULY 26thNo. 3- JULY 27th to AUGUST 2ndNo. 4 - AUGUST 3rd to AUGUST 9thNo. 5 - AUGUST 10th to AUGUST 16thNo. 6 - AUGUST 17th to AUGUST 23rdNo. 7 - AUGUST 24th to AUGUST 30th

All Periods Open Sunday Noon and Close Saturday Noon

ftafos . .V

Periods No. 1 - No. 2 - $5O. All others $25 '

* *

* Season $207Supervision N. J. State Council Knights of Columbus '

WrHo or A** to Ml. LAWRBNCI A. BRENNAN

Wt WMts Plate, South Orange. N. I Phono So. Onego ROMAlto* *too SP*h - Canos Cshnshus. Cohrors Lake. N l T«T.

NCCW Convention

Sept. 20-24 in St. LouisWASHINGTON (NC) Archbishop Karl J. Alter of

Cincinnati will deliver the sermon at the Pontifical Masswhich will highlight the 20th biennial NCCW convention inSt. Louis Sept. 20-24.

The sessions to be held in the Kiel Auditorium, willattract representatives of 9,000,-000 Catholic women from all

parts of the nation. The conven-tion delegates will sing the Mass,marking the first time this devo-tion has been practiced at anNCCW convention.

Archbishop Joseph E. Ritter ofSt. Louis( convention host, will of-fer the Pontifical Mass the after-noon of Sept. 21 in the St. Louiscathedral, at which ArchbishopAlter will preach. The Cincin-nati prelate is chairman of theLay Organizations Department ofthe National Catholic WelfareConference.

The convention theme is "With-in the Folds of Her Mantle.”Margaret Mealey, NCCW

execu-tive secretary, said the theme was

inspired by the. mural in the

lobby of the NCWC headquar-ters building here, which depictsthe Church's history in this coun-

try beneath the folds of the man-tle of the Blessed Mother, U. S.patroness under her title of theImmaculate Conception.

Besides several open sessions

featuring speakers, the conven-

tion will be devoted to meetingsfor presidents of national affili-ated organizations; for presidentsof diocesan and deanery councilsand parish and local affiliatedunits, as well as for parish, dean-

ery and diocesan committeechairmen.

The traditional banquet willclose the convention Sept. 24.

The major business for the of-ficial delegates will be the elec-tion of national directors repre-senting 11 provinces in the U. S.

Linden WomanIs Council Prexy

KENILWORTH—-Mrs. John B.Coker of Linden was elected

president of the Union-WestfieldDistrict Council of Catholic Wom-

en at a meeting held at St.Theresa’s here May 18.

Mrs. Coker will be assisted dur-

ing the year by: Mrs. Frank J.Hickey, Plainfield; Mrs. Mattie

Matte, Rahway; Mrs. An-thony Picchocinski, Linden; Mrs.

George Dreibelbies, Linden, andMrs. Mary Bennett, Plainfield.

Representatives from 10 wom-

en’s groups heard Mrs. JosephH. Kenny of Plainfield, repre-sentative of the Mt. Carmel

Guild, speak on the need for

more social action volunteers.

Mrs. William J. Lamb ofScotch Plains was programchairman. Mrs. Clarence J. Uptonand Mrs. Mary Chaer were host-

esses for the host parish.

SWEET AND LOVELY: Six-year-old Rose Mary Greene of Nutley offers crown ofblossoms to the May Queen of Caldwell College for Women, Patricia Schrieber ofLivingston. Miss Schrieber reigned at the college’s Spring Festival when shecrowned Our Lady’s statue, and at the Coronation Ball, last week. Rose Mary at-

tended her as crown-bearer.

FROM THE WOMEN TO THE BOYS: The New Jersey State Federation of Woman'sClubs presented a $25,317.68 check to Rev. Robert P. Egan, director of New Jersey’sBoystown, Kearny. The funds will be used to buy kitchen equipment and improverecreational facilities at Boystown. Pictured above, left to right, are: Mrs. C. How-

ard Sanborne, Glen Ridge, president of the federation; Mrs. William L. Nussbaum,Hillsdale, evening membership chairman; Father Egan, and Mrs. John P. Broderick',

state project chairman.

With North Jersey Women

Spring VotesBy June Dwyer

Elections and final club activ-ities are filling the late Mayair. Results both executiveand financial-—are in the news.

Good Lin kMrs. Charles E. Garneau of

South Orange has been installed

as president of the Bayley-SetonI/cague of Seton Hall Univer-

sity. She will be assisted bynewly elected Mrs. Janies Stan-

ziale, Orange, and Mrs. Paul

H. Dnody, West Orange. Other

officers hold over to the end

of next year . . . Mrs. J. Thom-

as Harrington Jr. presided at

her first meeting as presidentof the Immaculate Heart of

Mary Council of Catholic Wom-

en, Wayne, recently. Other new

officers are: Mrs. George L.

Sullivan, Mrs. John Stuffle and

Mrs. Joseph Knaus . . .The Wayne Catholic women

also announced that a Commun-

ion breakfast will be held June1 at Donohue's RestaurarU fol-

lowing 8:30 a m Mass at HolyCross Church, Wayne, and at

the mission in PackanackSchool auditorium. Msgr. Har-old V. Colgan, founder of theBlue Army, will be the speak-er. Mrs. Edward McGrath is

breakfast chairman . . .

A calendar party planned forthe June meeting of the Ros-

ary Altar Society of St. John

the Apostle, Clai k-Lunden, will

be the first activity under the

direction of new president, Mrs.Ann Mylon. She will he assist-ed by Mrs. Margaret Zielen-

bach, Mrs. Margaret Voyniek,Mrs. Mary Spicer and Mrs. Ann

Eikamp . . .

I or the SpiritThe Catholic Teachers’ Sodal-

ity of Northern New Jerseywill hold a Communion break-

fast May 25 at the Hotel Plaza,Jersey City, at 10:30 a m The

breakfast, under the chairman-

ship of Joan Murphy, will fol-low the Bam. Mass in the St.

Peter’s College chapel. Mass

will be offered by Rev. Ray-mond W. Schouten, S.J., sodal-

ity moderator, for the inten-

tions of Mrs. Dell M. Riordan

and Mrs. Helen V Burke whoare retiring from teaching thia

year. Reception of new candi-dates and installation of offi-

cers will immediately followthe Mass. New officers are:

John Murphy, president; Rita

Savage, Mrs. Teres* Martucci,Rita Burke, Catherine Henry,Magdalene Yoerg and Mrs.

Jane Piers . ..

The Catholic Women’s Clubof Immaculate Heart of MaryChipel, North Bergen, will hold

a Communion breakfast at the

Hearth Restaurant in their

home town May 23 The womenwill attend the Bam Mass atthe chapel, at which the wom-

en's choir of St. Joseph's, WestNew York, will sing. Rev.

Thomas M. Reardon, regent of

Seton Hall University LawSchool, will spealA Mrs. FrankRattafarani is chairman

The children of members of

the Auxiliary of St. Michael's

Hospital, Newark, will be in

the May procession with the

nurses of the hospital May 22.

Amy Bitters, daughter of Mrs

Vincent Bitters of South Or-

ange, will crown Our lady. Mrs.

Gerald McCune is handling ar-

rangements . . .

Here 'tt t hereThe Altar and Scapular Con-

fraternity of St. Joseph's, Bo-

gota, will hold a catered lunch-

eon May 28 at 1 pm in theschool cafeteria. Mrs EdwardHeinzeman of Bogota is chair-

man assisted by Mrs Harold

Algie of Teaneck...

The Rosary-Altar Society of

St. I-awrencr, Chester, will

serve a buffet supper at the’ so-

cial and get acquainted dance

to be held .in the parish hall

May 30 at 8 p m. The event is

to welcome newcomers to the

parish.

Dominican Nun

Wins Math GrantMADISON—Sister Mary Helen,

0.P., a teacher at Bayley-El-lard High School there has re-

ceived a National Science Foun-dation grant for summer work atthe University of Notre Dame,as a member of the High School

Mathematics Teachers Institute.

Sister has previously studied

at Caldwell College, Seton Hall,Fordham, and Villanova Univer-

sities.

Musicalc Set

At St. Joseph’sPATKRSON A musicals an

titled "Happy School Days" will

be prciented by the Student Kac

ulty Cooperative Association ofSt Joseph a Hospital School of

Nursing, May 23 26 at the schoolauditorium.

Written by William A Rink

and directed by, Charles fUserle,Jr , the show will feature 40 atudent nurses, aided by 10 young

men of the Paterson area It la

being held for the benefit of the

association's recreation fund.

Nursing Shortage Is Chief TopicAt St. Louis National Convention

ST. LOUIS (NC) Shortages of Catholic nurses are a

growing concern to hospital administrators, delegates re-

ported to the ninth annual National Council of CatholicNurses convention here.

A number of hospital administrators said they feltthere was little shortage of wom-

en with “nursing vocations,” butthat few women cared to makethe financial sacrifices entailed

by nursing.“Today a high school gradu-

ate can go to a secretarial schoolfor a few months, and earn as

much as a registered nurse, whohas completed three years at a

school of nursing,” commentedMsgr. John J. Raleigh, directorof hospitals for the Mobile-Bir-

mingham diocese.

But St. Louis’ ArchbishopJoseph E. Ritter, convention

host and keynote speaker, toldthe nurses their vocation hada tremendous impact on so-

ciety.

“There is hardly any profes-sion that embraces so much, that

possesses such great value, as

that of nursing,” the Archbishopsaid.

Acknowledging that therewere fewer nurses than needed,the Archbishop called attentionto the number now in nursingservice.

“We are tremendously blessedin the United States with a largenumber of Catholic nurses,” hesaid. ”... You yourselves must

strive to recognize and appreci-ate your sublime calling as

nurses, and what it means toserve humanity in your capac-ity.”

Pointing out that Christ's mis-sion in the world was analogousto nursing,' the Archbishop saidChrist often used the healing ofthe body to lead to the healingof the soul. “It is your greatprivilege to share with Christ inthis apostdate," he said.

MSGR. PAUL F. TANNER,

National Catholic Welfare Confer

ence general secretary, urged tht

nurses to become apostles withi;

their own profession. “The firs'

and most immediate apostles of

the nurses must be nurses, said

Msgr. Tanner.

“Ever remember,” he con-

tinued, “that the apostolate ofnurse to nurse is the basic rea-

son for your existence; that no

matter how large, how strong,how technically advanced you

may become, the NCCN will ba

meaningless unless it remains ar

instrument enabling you to leadeach other closer to Christ.”

Some 2,000 nurses, largely laywomen, attended the conven-

tion, which was the largest-inthe council’s history.

Sisters of St. Joseph to Host

Vocation Programs for GirlsENGLEWOOD A three-day

series of vocation programs willbe presented by the Sisters ofSt. Joseph of Newark, for girlsof grammar and high school ageand older, and for the parents of

prospective candidates to the

religious life.

Parents day will be May 31 at

St. Michael's Novitiate here, withRev. George Byrne, speaker.Coronation of Our Lady's statueby the novices will be a feature.

On June 1 girls of high school

age and older will be addressedby Msgr. William F. Furlong,archdiocesan director of voca-

tions. Over 200young women are

expected. The program will beat St. Michael's Novitiate.

Grammar school girls will meet

at Barbara Givernaud Home,North Bergen, to hear a talk byRev. Bennett Kelly, C.P., voca-

tions director for the Passionist

Fathers.

Displays and slides will illus-trate various phases of the workof the Sisterhood at all three

days.

Study ApostolateDAYTON (NO The first an-

nual study week on the apostolateof the laity will be held at theUniversity of Dayton here on

June 17-20.

State Catholic DaughtersMeet in Atlantic City

ATLANTIC CITY The 26thbiennial convention of the StateCourt of the Catholic Daughtersof America convened here in the

Claridge Hotel May 22. The con-

vention will close May 25 follow-

ing the election of state officersand 10 delegates to the nationalconvention.

Bishop Justin McCarthy ofCamden was to be guest speaker

at the brunch following a Ponti-fical Mass in St. Nicholas Church

May 23. Bishop Martin W. Stan-

ton. CDA state chaplain, wasscheduled to preach the sermon

at the Mass which was offered byBishop McCarthy.

The 0 a m. Mass May 24 will beoffered by Bishop Stanton for

■the living and deceased membersof the state CDA.

i A feature of the conventionwas the unveiling of a bronze

plaque reading "In God W#

|Trust" at the Atlantic City PostOffice May 25. The plaque, the

gift of Court Stella Maris, Atlan-tic City, is the first to be erected

at a Post Office in New Jersey andthe first in the nation to be

sponsored by any CDA court.Theme of the convention which

is being attended by representa-tives from 98 courts is "Catholic

Action for Our Lady of Lourdes."

1 SUPPORT church charities.

May 24,1958 THE ADVOCATE 15

The HearthMharo dining is a plioturc

not on oxtravagonco"

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Group entertaining It a

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School Track Notes

Nine Records 'Broken' by Stars

In Warmups for NJCTC MeetBy Ed Grant

NEWARK With their eyes firmly set on the second

annual New Jersey Catholic Track Conference outdoor

championships at Englewood, May 31, North Jersey Catholic

and field stars scored impressively in a variety of

meets over the past week. (The accompanying chart showsthat the boys have already ex-

ceeded league records in nine

of 13 events.)

Biggest coup of all came atthe Hudson County meet, with

John Connolly of Marist winningthe 880-yard run in 2:04.3, LarryPegut of St. Aloysius taking the

low hurdles in 20.8, Tom Liggiocf St* Joseph’s (WNY) coppingthe discus at 149-10V4, Ron Mey-ers of St. Michael’s (UC) the

shot at 48-5 and, most astonish-

ing development of the season,Tom Nyire of St.- Aloysius lift-

ing his 6-6 frame over the six-foot mark to win the high jump.

This jump by Nyire is the fin-

est in - recent history by a Cath-

olic high school athlete and, if

repeated in the NJCTC and NJS-

IAA meets, will mean new rec-

ords for the basketball star. To

add to the laurels in this meet,Pegut was second in the highhurdles, Tom Cunningham of St.

Peter's surprised with a second

in the javelin and Frank Koch

of St. Peter’s won the freshman

300 in 34.5.

AT THE ENGLEWOOD Memo-rial meet, there was disappoint-ment as Jack Mostyn of BergenCatholic arrived too late to run

in the 440 heat, shoved up half

an hour from its scheduled time.But Ed Wyrsch of Seton Hall

ran a 4:35.5 mile for his best time

yet, Ed Schmitt of Don Boscoturned in a 4:42.7 and Paul Deg-nan of Immaculate Conceptionwas second in the novice milewith 4:41.7.

St. Michael’s (JC) could do no

better than fifth in the two-mile

relay here with an 8:21.1 clock-

ing, Essex Catholic settled forfourth in the freshman 880-yardrelay, Daryl Russell of Delbarton

was fifth in the novice 880 andPeter Yatraikis came home sixthin the open 180-yard low hur-dles.

IN THE NJCTC'sown freshman-

sophomore meet at Lincoln Park

on May 15, Essex Catholic coppedfrosh honors with 47 points to

27-1/5 for Marist and St. Peter’s,while A1 Adams and Ernie Tol-

entino personally handed St.Michael’s (JC) the soph crown,scoring all but two of the pointswhich handed their school a 42-37 verdict over Bergen Catholic.

Adams won the 88d in 2:08 andthe broad jump with a Jeap oflfr-lYa, while Tolentino took themile in 4:54 and the high jumpat 5-5. Other soph champs were

Jim Vicari of St. Michael’s (UC)in the 100 (10.7), Bob Blazer of

Bergen Catholic in the 220 (24.5),Bob Carlton of St. Aloysius inthe 440 (56.1) and Stu Hollisof Pope Pius in the shot put(40.5).

In the freshman division, it

was Roger Callahan of Essex inthe 100 (11.1), John Darmstadtof Holy Trinity in the 220 ( 28.4),Koch in the 440 (58.6), Russellin the 880 ( 2:12), Dave Hyland ofSt. Peter’s (NB) in the mile

(5;01), A1 Ganci of Marist in thebroad jump (17-0), George Keen-en of St. Peter’s (JC) in the highjump (SY«) and John Fisher ofSt. Peter’s (NB) in the eight-pound shot put (46-IV4).

OTHER ACTION of the weeksaw Hufch Lordon of Delbartontake the 440 at the Dover Invi-tational, May 13, in 52.4 andteammate Carmine Lunetta upsetPete Hoey of Mt. Lakes in themile at 4:39.5 and Stan Blejwasof Holy place third-in theUnion County mile at 4:42.2, withteammate Bill Weikel fourth inthe 880 at 2:05.7.

Cqming up this week is theNew Jersey Independent SchoolsAthletic Association meet, May24 at Peddie, with St. Benedict'sand Delbarton entered. The Beescould veiy well win this meetwith Frank Barnes, Tommy So-wa, John Butler, Phil Armando,Brian O'Connor and John Martin

as their leading entries. Lordonand Lunetta should do well indi-

vidually for Delbarton.

There are also the JerseyCity championships the same daywith St. Aloysius, St. Michael’s,St. Peter’s and St. Mary's in thefield and the North Arlington in-

vitational where Bergen Catholic,Holy Trinity and other teams inthat area will be among the en-tries.

Peacocks Honor

Mor ano, FarrellJERSEY CITY - Hank Mo-

rano and Larry Farrell re-

ceived special honors at theannual St. Peter’s College ath-letic banquet held at DineenHall on May 18.

To Morano went the award

as the outstanding senior ath-lete (Hank's actually a junior,but will be ineligible next

year), while to Farrell wentthe prize as the top student-athlete in the senior class. Lar-

ry’s a Fulbright Scholar and a

member of the bowling team.

Surprise of the night was thepresentation of an NIT watchto Very Rev. James J. Shana-

han, St. Peter’s president, who

was slightly overwhelmed bythe gift. A fourth award wasthat of the annual PeacockTrophy to Hudson County’s out-

standing all-around school ath-lete, Judson Mundorf of Me-morial High School.

St. Joseph's (S)

To Honor HagenNEWARK Edwin T. (Eddy)

Hagen, for five years coach ofthe St. Joseph’s (Spanish) CYO

teams, will be honored at a testi-monial dinner, June 8, at the Ter-

race Room.

In announcing the affair, Rev.John Riera, director of CYO ac-

tivities for the parish, said thatthe dinner will “show Eddy our

gratitude for all the time andwork he has put-in these lastfive years."

Tickets for the affair, which

gets under way at 7:30 p.m., maybe obtained from Melchor Perez,212 Lafayette St., Newark.

NJCTC Leaders(Th» following lUtf tha top perform-

er! in each event of the New -TerierCatholic Track Conference champlon-ahip program, as of May 19)100-Mostyn. Bergen CathoUc 10.3

220-Moatyn. Bergen Catholic......

22.3

440-Sowa. St. Benedlpt’a Sl.3*

BRO-Connoll.v, Marist 2:04.3MUe-Wyrach. Seton Hall ......4:35.5*HH-Yatralkla. Salon Hall 15.9*I.H-Pegut, St. Aloyalua 20.8*BJ-Kocot, St. Micnael'a <JC) 21-0*HJ-Nyire, St. Aloyalua 8-0*PV-O'Connor, St. Benedict’a .... 10-8*

SP-Meyert. St. Michael’a (VC) 52-8*PT-Liggio. St. Joaeph’g (WNY) 149-10V**JT-McDyer. Camden Catholic . 180-V4’lndicate! mark la better than exlatlngNJCTC record.

Hoboken Parish

Sweeps Track MeetUNION CITY Our Lady of

Grace, Hoboken, ran away withthe development grammar schooltrack meet conducted by the Hud-

son County Holy Name Federa-tion on May 17 at Roosevelt

Stadium in preparation for theannual Field Day on June 1 at

Pershing Field, Jersey City.Pete Bellicourt's charges won

all eight boys events, with RalphBraley, Richard Burdy, JamesDePolo and Ray Dondero takingthe individual races.

St. John's Honors TwoBROOKLYN Among the ath-

letes to receive letters at St.John's University this' season

were Mike Pedone of Jersey Cityand Mike Bellobuono of CliffsidePark. Both were members of thebasketball team.

School CollegeSport

COLLSBS •ASIBAIL

Saturday, May 1481 John ■ at Katon Hall

SCHOOL BAMSALI

Saturday., May 1481. Patar'a at St Mo rani.St, Banadlcfa at PanntrurtonGood Counaal at St. Jatnaa illMartat at Don Bo.ro Tarh

lundav Ua« st

St. Ronavantura at Don Itoaro Tarh •

St. Mlrhaal'a tN> at WalahSt. John’a at DaPaulSt. Joasph'a (Wl at St. CarUta'a <Ei

Monday. May 14Walah at ImmarulataCos pa ptua at St. CarUta'a <K> IMartat at St. Mtchasl'a UC>Quaan of Paara at Don Boaro tSt. Mary's IRi at Slavana AradamyAayonna at St. Patar'a

Vallay at Salon Hall

Dalbarton at Marnalown Pro*SI. Jaaaph'a tW) at DamaraatSt. Joaaeh'a tpt at St Mary'a IP) •

Sartan Catholic at (nilswoodCarta rat at Oratory

Tuatdav. May IfOratory at Dalbarton .

Sarrod Haart at 81. Patrick's

St, Mlrhaal'a tN) at Goad Counaal

Bataan Catholic at St CarUta'a <K> IJaffaraon at St. ItanadtrCaSt CarUta'a tKi at St. Mary'a tillCUfton at Poos Ptua

Wldntidiv Mlv

Vf

St CarUta'a tK> at St Mlrhaal'a tN)Holy Trinity <Wt at Quoan of PoaroManat at Sarrod Haart

l-odi at Pop# Pm.Dtrktnaon at St AloyatuaSt Mlrhaal'a 'JO at ParrfaSortao Cathohr at Satan HallSt Joaaph'a 'WI at Doit Soar*Aria at St JantaaSt Mlrhaal'a 11*0 at Stayatu AradamyPatrraon Tarh at M. Bana'aaturaSt Patar'a at I.inrain

Thurtfa* Ms v If

St Mlrhaal'a tuc/at Maty Family»t Canlta a IK> at UnrotnImmarulata at St. Mary'a tm

Good Counaal at ArtsDaPaul al St Mary'a tPIhast Sida at St RanadtrCs

Srtday. May It

Do# hoaro Tarh al Maty SaintMaty Trinity tWI at Marts!St. Baaa.anlura al St Luka's *

•» •» Lincoln*-PKC Game i TCC Oama

Baseball Teams Show Profit in DealingsWith Outside Foes: 62 Wins, 55 Losses

NEWARK It appears that baseball, long the poorrelation among sports in Catholic high schools, has takena step upwards this season, despite all the tribulations withrain, wet grounds, and what have you.

Through games of May 18, the 36 teams in the NorthJersey area actually showed a

slight profit in their dealingswith outside rivals either lo-cal public schools or Catholicschools from New York or SouthJersey. The precise count was62 victories lor the area clubs

against 55 for their rivals.

Highlighting this record wasthe work of the teams which ap-pear in the adjoining table as the“Top Ten”, that is the 10 clubswith the best won-lost recordsthrough May 19. Undefeated St.Peter’s leads them all in carry-ing the banner against the in-

vaders, with a 7-0 record whichhas helped keep the Petreansatop both the South Hudson andJersey City loops with identical8-0 marks.

NOT FAR BACK is the St.Luke's team which repelled thethreat of St. Joseph's in the Pas-saic-Bergen Catholic Conferenceon May 14, handling the Pater-

son club its first loss of the sea-

son, 5-2, in the process. The Lu-cans have won five, lost one

against the outsiders, the setbackat the hands of St James (PennsGrove) being their lone blackmark of the Spring.

Don Bosco, Don Bosco Tech,St. Joseph’s and Walsh *ll showperfect records against the ali-

ens, their number of victories

descending in perfect order fromfour to one. This past week,though, the first-named concen-trated on Tri-County CatholicConference matters,moving swift-ly into a tie with Pope Pius forsecond place at 4-2 via victoriesover Queen- of Peace, BergenCatholic and the Eagles them-selves.

•All three of these wins, in a

period of five days, were creditedto southpaw ace Jim Walsh, whothus moved into the category offive game winners along with

Bernie Galdieri of Bayley-Ellard(6-1), Dan McHorney of St. Ceci-lia’s (E) (6-0), Johnny Baldo ofSt. Luke's (6-0) and the St.Peter’s twosome of Bill Kretzerand Jack Szeigis (5-0 apiece).

DON BOSCO was one ofthe teams to make a move in thepast week or so. Immaculate Con-

ception now has a five-game win-

ning streak to push its recordto 84 and thus nose into theNJSIAA “B” race with Walsh,Bayley, Holy Trinity and DonBosco Tech. Walsh also has a

five-game run, but this datesback to May 2 and the only lateaddition was an 84 defeat ofSt. Michael's (N) on May 14.

Getting back to those records

against the outside clubs, St.

Benedict’s is even with St. Luke’sin victories at five, but has lost

twice; Bayley has a Si mark;Delbarton a 4-2 record; St. Ceci-lia’s is 2-1 and St. Bonaventure,a team which ranks just below theelite 10 at 5-3, is perfect in this

regard (3-0).

THE LEAGUE races are now

moving into final stages, with the

Passaic-Bergen Catholic Confer-

ence picture depending chiefly onthe outcome of the St. Luke’s-St. Joseph’s tilt scheduled for

May 21. If the Lucans repeatedtheir dominance of St. Joseph’sthat day, it’s hard to see what

can stop Ange Scafuro's boysshort of another title.

St. Cecilia’s (E) is riding highin the Tri-County Catholic Con-ference with a 3-0 mark as PopePius and Don Bosco are tied at4-2. The Saints have beaten bothrivals once already and playPope Pius a second time at home

May 26, three days after the datewith Don Bosco.

Not content with its busy Hud-

son schedule this year, St. Peter’sis involved in the Great Newark

Tournament and was set to openplay as the sixth-seeded team

against St. Benedict's at Roose-velt Stadium, Jersey City, on

May 23. The winnbr of that one

meets up with Matawan or Jeffer-

son in the second round of the

tourney.

THI TOP TIN

, W L Set.

£• ?*,*r1* ••••• » 0 1.000Luk«’» 10 1 .909

St. Joseph a <P> 7 i .975St. Cecilia'a (E)

....S 1 .857

Bayley-Ellard 9 a 818Don Bosco ;T.. . 8 a .800Don Bosco Tech ....

8 a. 750W.l.h fl ,? ;7MSt. Benedict’* 10 4 - 714Delbarton

5 a Jl4

PASSAIC-BCaCEN c. c.

,. , w L Pet.

St. Lukes 4 0 1.000St. Joaeph a 5 1 .833Don Boaco Tech 3 a 500St. Benedict'a 1 a 333

0 3 1000St. John a 0 4 .000

THI-COUNTY C. C.

W'

L Pet.St. Cecilia’a 3 0 1.000Pop* Piu* 4 a .867Hon Bosco

*#*.. 4 2 .667

Bergen Catholic 1 5 J67Queen of Peace ......0 3 .000

Green Wave Win

Ivy League GolfMONTCLAIR Delbarton

warmed up for the NJISAA golftournament May 24 as it wonits second straight Ivy Leaguetitle May 18 at the MontclairGolf Club.

Bob O’Mara shot a 42 to leadthe victors, followed by JohnnyLake with a 44, Dennis Oshawith a 45 and Joe Gallagher witha 51. St. Benedict's will also bein the field at Peddie on the24th, which is also the site anddate of the league tennis andtrack championships.

LAYING PLANS: Tom Finn, St. Michael’s track andfield coach, talks over the upcoming NJCTC andNJSLAA meets withhis ace two-mile relay team, fastestsuch New Jersey Catholic high school combine in his-tory. Kneeling, left to right, sophomore Ernie Tolen-tino and senior Bob Kocot; standing, same order, jun-

ior Pete Ganucci and sophomore Al Adams.

Knights Name

Walsh, PotyralaRUTHERFORD-Tom Walsh,

Queen of Peace alumnus, andCharlie Potyrala, St. Peter’s

Prep grad, received the twotop athletic awards at Fair-leigh-Dickinson University this

year.

To Walsh went the WalterDetti Trophy for outstandingaccomplishment in scholarshipand athletics. Tom has been asecond baseman with the var-

sity for the past three yearsand maintained an “A” aver-

age through four years ofschool.

Potyrala, who set all kindsof scoring records last winterwith the basketball team, was

named the "athlete of theyear.’’-

St. Peter's Ends

Dickinson StreakJERSEY CITY-The St. Peter's

Prep tennis team, outstandingamong North Jersey Catholicteams this season, ended the 61-match winning streak of Dickin-

son with a 3-2 upset May 14 atLincoln Park.

Jim Whelan iced the match’ for

Petreans with a 6-2, 3-6, 6-2 de-feat of the Rams previously un-

beaten, nationally ranked boysplayer Hal German.

The St. Peter’s team haslost only two Matches all season,one to Dickinson and the other

to unbeaten Ridgewood, whose

winning streak has -passed the90 mark.

Marks Bright LightIn Pirates' Slump

SOUTH ORANGE All hope for team honors now

vanished, Seton Hall presents its star centerfielder, Richie

Marks, as a prime candidate for NCAA District II all-star

recognition.Marks kept the Pirates in the Collegiate Baseball

Conference chase down to thewire with his triple helping tosend the decisive May 19 contestwith Upsala into 13 innings.When the Vikings pushed oyer a

tally in that fatal round off re-

liefer Ed Szerencsits, it was all

over.

THERE WAS still some unfin-

ished business for the Pirates

this week as they were to endtheir campaign at home againstpowerful St. John’s on May 24.The record read 11-7 after the

Upsala loss, so there is no chanceof a final dip under .500. Not as

much could be said for St. Pe-

ter’s, which wound up a rain-

wrecked campaign at 3-7.

Marks carried a .375 battingaverage into the Upsala game,where his triple in the third,, in-

ning gave the Pirates a tempo-rary 2-0 lead. Richie’s all-star

credentials also included a .597

slugging average, 18 RBls,'amodern Seton Hall record of 11stolen bases and an almost flaw-less (one error) performance inthe outfield.

One of the few Pirates not hit Jby the mid-season batting slump,]Marks will probably be joined in

the .300 class at season’s end byPhil Samuels, Joe Ritter and co-|captain Mike Sheppard. Samuels'was the only other Seton Hall

regular to hit with any consisten-

cy during the dark days of early1May. v

IT WAS UNFORTUNATE that

Szercncsits had to be tagged- with!the final loss, for, along with

soph Joe Tosies, Ed had bornethe pitching burden when sore

arms felled seniors Julie Nicolai.Johnny Green and Johnny Allen.

Nicolai was of no help after

winning his first two starts. Sen-ior Ron Berthasavage and jun-ior Frank Baier did some relief

work, but it was Szerencsits and

Tosies who handled almost 75%of the load. Ed had a 4-3 recordafter the Upsala game, while To-sies stood at 3-2.

THE PIRATES put on a real

slugging match with St. Peter’s

on May 14 in what turned out to

be the final game for the Pea-

cocks. In the second and third

innings alone, the teams scored

19 runs and it wound up 16-15 in

Seton Hall’s favor. Marks had

three hits, four RBIs and three

stolen bases in that one.

Tosies was the boy who finallyended the game by striking out

Tom Clarke with the bases load-

ed in the ninth and it was Joe

who came on to salvage the

Army game for Szerencsits, 6-3,May 17 at West Point. Mark*

had himself a field day in this

one with four hits, including the

single-which led to the four-run

winning rally in the eighth.

Three Parishes

Gain Twin HonorsFORT LEE St. Joseph’s

(Bogota), St. Anastasia’s (WestEnglewood) and St. Catharine’s

(Glen Rock) had two winners

apiece as the Bergen County CYO

Sportsmanships Awards were an-

nounced this week by Rev. Wil-liam P. Devine, director.

The Bogota parish topped allentries in the grammar girls “A”and senior boys leagues, the West

Englewood lads were chosen in

grammar boys “B” and junidrboys “B” and the Glen Rockentries/in grammar girls “B” and

grammar boys "C”.

Awards are given to the teamthat best exemplifies the qualitiesthat the CYO is trying to developthrough-competitive athletes.Other winners included:

Grammar boys, St. Joseph’s(Englewood Cliffs); junior girls,St. John’s (Leonia) and St. An-drew’s (Westwood); junior boys,St. Michael’s (Palisade Park) andSt. Therese’s (Cresskill); inter-

mediate boys, St. Joseph's (EastRutherford), St. Mary's (Ruther-

ford) and St. Matthew's (Ridge-field).

Holy Trinity (W)

Names HannanWESTFIELD Mickey Han*

nan, former basketball star atSeton Hall, has been named tocoach the basketball ahd base-

ball teams at Holy Trinity for

the 1958-59 school year.

Hannan's appointment was an-

nounced this week by Msgr. Hen-

ry J. Watterson. He will succeed

Harry Singleton as basketball

mentor and Paul Roedell as base-ball coach. Roedell, who also

served as track tutor at Trinity,entered the Army last week.

After graduation from SetonHall in 1954, Hannan was basket-ball coach at Archbishop Walshfor three years. His teams there

had a combined record of 20-36,these being the first three sea-

sons of varsity activity at the

Irvington school.

While at Seton Hall, Hannan

was a teammate of Richie Re-gan and Walter Dukes on tho1952-53 NIT champs. Bad knees,however, limited Mickey’s rolewith the Pirates and kept himfrom rcalfzing the potential hehad shown as one of the highestscoring players in New York

schoolboy history.The change in coaches came

just as Holy Trinity was havingits annual sports dinner May 21,at which awards were presentedfor the 1957-58 school year. Guest

speakers, at the affair includedRev. Thomas G. Fahey, SetonHall athletic director; Jack Fla-herty, president of the metropol-itan AAU, and Regan, now fresh-

man coach at Seton Hall.In addition t<) the regular ath-

letic awards, special ones wer«

given to Pete Foley as the out-

standing basketball player, Hel-

en Kruse as the outstanding stu-dent-athlete and Tom Capece, forhis work as liaison man betweenthe student body and the athletic

committee.

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EXPERT ADVICE: Members of the cast of “Best Foot Forward” at St. Andrew’s

CYO ,Bayonne, receive some expert tips on acting from Farley Granger during a

visit to North Jersey Playhouse ’ Thomas Hitchell, left, director of the show, in-

troduces the motion picture star to, seated, left to right, Maureen O’Donnell, CharlesBurke and Cathy Bouton; standing, Nancy Heinemann and Brian Boyle. Final per-formance of “Best Foot Forward” was slated for May 23.

Now RegisteringAt Essex CampsMONTCLAIR Registration

Is now open for the three Essex

County CYO summer day campsat CYO headquarters, 425 Bloom-

field Ave., and will continue

through June 13 or until all va-cancies are filled.

The camps, which will run

June 30-Aug. 22 are located atSt. Paul the Apostle School, Irv-ington; St. Philomena’s, Living-ston, and Our Lady of the Lake,Verona. Boys and girls, 7-14, are

eligible.Approximately 350 youngsters

will be admitted to each camp.The program, under professional

supervision, include daily swim-ming, special outings, tourna-

ments and other events. Camphours are 9 a.m.-3:15 p m., exceptWednesday, when trips extendthe day to 5:15 p.m.

COMING AND GOING: Dr. Angelo Danesino, chair-man of the Graduate Scholarship Committee at St.Peter’s College, welcomes home James Daley, 1955

Fulbright Award winner, after his philosophy studiesin Germany. Looking on is Lawrence Farrell, 1958Fulbright winner, the 12th for St. Peter’s in the lastfive years. The map to the rear depicts the location

where each of the graduates studied in Europe.

Four Win Honors

In Essay ContestFORT LEE There was an

even division of awards in theBergen County CYO essay con-test this year with the four win-

ners coming from as many par-ishes.

William Earle of St. Mary's,Rutherford, won the high school

boys’ division, while Jeanette

Riggio of St. Catharine's, GlenRock, took the high school girls’prize.

In the eight grade division, it

was Joseph Connors of Epiphany,Grantwood, among the boys andBarbara Fieder of Sacred Heart,Hudson Heights, among the girls.

All of the winning essays wereentered in the archdiocesan CYOcontest. The topic for the con-

test this year was, "The Advocateis an aid to, and a continuationof, a Catholic education for thewhole family.”

Among the runners-up in theBergen contest were CarolynSywak, Kathleen Lawler, Thomas

Godfrey, Julia feader, Eleanor

Hess, Robert Mantzinger andEdward Zlotkowski.

Benefit DanceMONTCLAIR The second an-

nual review and dance for thebenefit of the drum and buglecorps of Immaculate Conceptionparish will be sponsored by the

Squires and Crusaders, June 6,at the high school gymnasium.Rev. James A. Carey is moder-

ator.

School Notes

St Benedict's, Valley PapersHonored at St. Bonaventure

ST. BONAVENTURE The Benedict News, student

paper at St. Benedict’s Prep (Newark) was cited four timesfor meritorious performance at the 11th annual St. Bona-venture High School Press Day, held May 15 at the campus.

In addition to the citation to the paper itself, the follow-ing staff writers on the BenedictNews received certificates of

merit of commendation in their

specialized fields: John Lynskeyfor his art work, Gerald Ford forhis column and Stephen Fischlfor his editorial writing.

Right behind the BenedictNews came The Valley Voice,the student paper at Our Ladyof the Valley (Orange). Awardshere went to Marianne Carlsonfor art and to the paper itself.There was a record number of129 papers entered in the contest

this year.

Lacnrdaire School (UpperMontclair) presented an art ex-

hibit May 23 with morethan 150works shown by the variousclasses. The freshmen worked incharcoal and pastels doing por-traits and scenes; the sopho-mores presented the history of

art, concentrating on the Byzan-tine and medieval periods, butalso touching modern art; the

juniors showed paper sculpture,copper work on cork, scratch

board and ink batik and the sen-

iors did oils and copper enamel-ing.

Edward McMahon, Jr., a sen-

ior at Queen of Peace (North

Arlington), has won theArchdiocesan Scholarship toCatholic University’s school of

engineering and architecture. Heis the editor of the school paper,member of the mathematics andFrench clubs and a second lieu-

tenant in the Civil Air Patrol.

Edward intends to major in elec-trical engineering at Catholic U.

The annual Spring Musicale,entitled “Around the World” will

be presented at Bergen Catholic

(Oradell) on May 29 at 8 p.m.:Brother E. M. McEnroe will di-|rect the glee club, James J. Ob-rotka will conduct the band and

Brother Lawrence serves as |

moderator of the group .. .

TheSt. Peter’s Prep (Jersey City)band presented its concert to

1,500 teaching nuns of the Arch-diocese of Newark and Dioceseof Paterson at the-school gym-nasium May 17.

Maureen McCabe, prefect of

the Sodality at Mt. St. Dominic

(Caldwell) crowned the statue ofOur Lady of Fatima at cere-

monies honoring the Blessed Vir-

gin Mary on May 21 at the cam-

pus. She was assisted by Sodal-

ity officers Lynn and Betty Ter-

reri and Susan White . . . Stu-

dents from the Mount enjoyed an

outing to Crystal Caves, Pa.,May 22.

Corps PreviewAt Jersey CityJERSEY CITY The second

annual “Preview of Champions"drum and bugle' corps competi-tion will be held at Roosevelt

Stadium, May 31, sponsored bythe St. Patrick’s Cadets.

For the first time, a senior

corps from Canada, the “JollyJesters” of Toronto, will takepart in a contest in the metro-

politan area. Also in the seniordivision are the defending Haw-thorne Caballeros, the Stratford(Conn.) Yankees and the Syra-

cuse Brigadiers.The junior field will include

the Blessed Sacrament Golden

Knights of Newark, St. JamesCadets of Baltimore, Braintree(Mass.) Warriors and the St.Catherine of Siena Queensmenfrom St. Alban’s, N. Y.

McLaughlin to SpeakAt Essex Youth Parley

EAST ORANGE John McLaughlin, chairman of theNational Council of Catholic Youth, will be among the guestspeakers at the annual Essex County Catholic Youth Con-

ference, May 25 at Our Lady Help of Christians parish hall.The conference is due to get under way at 2.20 p m and

I will include four business ses-

sions, a buffet supper and social

and Benediction of the MostBlessed Sacrament, celebrated byRev. Charles McDonnell of St.

jCatherine of Siena, Cedar Grove,| acting director of the Essex

ICounty CYO.

CHIEF BUSINESS of the dayis the election of officers, with

only one incumbent nominatedfor a second term —chairman

Bruce Byrnes of St. John's, Or-

ange. Bob Richardson of Our!Lady Help of Christians prepared!the slate to be presented. It also Iincludes nominees for vice-chair-{man, two secretaries and a dele-

gate to the archdiocesan conven-

tion.

In addition to McLaughlin, a

former chairman of the council.!the list of guest speakers includesRev. David Ernst of the host par-ish, who will welcome the dele-

gates for 20 parish-affiliatedyoung adult groups.

ANNUAL REPORTS are to be

presented by the following com-

mittee chairmen: Mary Burgh-hardt, St. Stanislaus, Newark,spiritual committee; Betty Perce

vault, Our Lady of the Lake. Ver-

ona, social; Lillian Krigger, All

Souls, East Orange, cultural; Peg-gy Lee, Our Lady of the Valley,Orange, social action; and John

Cohrs, St. John’s, athletic.

Resolutions and rules for the*|

council are being drafted by a1committee headed by John Mul-jvihill of St. John's. Arrangementsfor the conference are beingmade by Joseph Klimkp of Bless-

ed Sacrament, Newark, outgoingvice-chairman.

TV, Marriage, DisciplineAreTopics for Union CYO

WESTFIELD Discussions on television, marriageand discipline in the public schools will feature the annualconvention of the Senior Youth Council of the Union CountyCYO, May 25 at Holy Trinity parish hall.

The delegates will open the day at 10:30 a.m. Mass inSt. Bartholomew’s, Scotch Plains,followed by breakfast at Mrs. B's

in the same community. Assistant

prosecutor Myles J. Gilsenan ofElizabeth will be the principalspeaker at the breakfast.

ALSO INCLUDED In the program are the election of officersfor the 1958-59 season, installa-tion of the new officers in cere-

monies at Holy Trinity Church.Benediction of the Most Blessed

Sacrament and a concluding so-

cial hour.

Mrs. Gladys Venes of ScotchTlains, radio and television writ-er for the Plainfield CourierNews will discuss the television

influences. Miss Lois McCarthyof the Westfield school systemwill lead the discussion on disci-

pline and Rev. John Caulfield, St.jBartholomew’s curate, will talkon marriage.

The panel discussions will be-gin at 2:30 p.m. with 15-minutetalks by the speakers, which thenwill be followed by a 45-minute

open discussion. Priests and coun

cil members will serve as moder-ators and discussion chairmen.

CONTESTS ARE on tap forelection to the posts of chairman,vice-chairman and correspondingsecretary. John Zande of HolyTrinity, incumbent chairman, ischallenged by John Diamonte ofChrist the King, Hillside; JosephChemidilin of St. Bartholomew’s,vice-chairman, by Peter Young ofSt. Mary’s, Elizabeth; and Con-stance Stawarz of Christ the King,secretary, by Ann Harvanick ofSt. Elizabeth's, Linden.

Unopposed in the balloting are

Gloria Mlynarik of St Elizabeth's,nominated to succeed Loretta Davis of St. Mary’s as recording andfinancial secretary and William

Rapp of St. Michael’s, Elizabeth,nominated to replace Gail Bolanof St. Catherine’s, Hillside, asarchdiocesan delegate.

DO PENANCE, make a finan-cial sacrifice for the poor

Parishes Gain

Essex AwardsMONTCLAIR St. Thomas

the Apostle, Bloomfield, and St.

Casimir's, Newark, have joinedSt. John’s, Orange, as winners in

the Essex County CYO’s annual

participation contest. Purpose of

the contest is to honor those par-ishes which are most active inthe county CYO program.

St. Thomas was declared thewinner in Divsion I, composed of

the larger parishes in the coun-

ty. St. Casimir's scored in Divi-sion 111, St. John's had been an-

nounced as Division II winnerearlier.

All three will receive specialawards when the CYO holds its

annual Night of Champions at Im-

maculate Conception High School

on June 9. Of the three, only St.

John's was a winner in 1P57 al-

though the other two have placedfirst in former years

The Time of Your Life

Confirmation Reminder

Ry Rev. Gabriel W. Hafford

Pentecost Sund«y should bring all of us

down on our knee* in th»nkful prayer for allwe have gained through the Holy Ghost. Letthis day remind you of the day of your con-firmation. It will be refreshing to think ofthat great day, and the confidence you had

in the Third Person of theBlessed Trinity. This is justthe time to ask Him for allthe help you need right now

to do the will of God in all

thing*. If that is your goal,heaven is your goal.

lot If ShowDon't keep your religion to

yourself; Jet it show. If youactually are living your religion to the hilt, you cannot hide

it. Many good persons are willing to be »old the

religion that Christ brought to earth, but theywant to aee It in action. Perhap* they reasonthat It can't be the true religions unless it look*that way in practice. You have your duty in thatsphere.

The Station Wagon SiHori

Two nuns discovered they had a flat tire

just aa they drew alongside a long line of peo-

ple waiting for their unemployment check*

Spotting the father of one of their school chil

dren, the Slaters called for help and got It

only after agreeing to take the man's place inline The local minuter drove past the spot andseeing the nun in line, remarked to his com

Ptthw. “Wow, the depression Is worm than I

thought or the Pope wouldn’t be laying off."

FattinalingI got caught with anew book this week,

and couldn’t rest until it was finished It IsMsgr Fittkau's "My Thirty-Third Year "

In ithe tells hia experience In a Russian work camp.There are many resolutions you will make afterfinishing the book You will say your prayersbetter, that la for sure You will vote earhchance you get You will begin to plead withGod for peace Msgr Elttkau can be reachedat 1050 E 233rd St , New York M, N Y Book$4 50.

Decent Disks and Suitable SongsSo Young So Fair Hot Spell (Victor)

Bmie Felice Carry My Books A Lever CanTell (Capitoli Bobby and Jim, Dream FaceRun Around (Victor) Twin Tunes Quintet; I'llNever Be Sorry Lonely Moonlight ilf-G M)Jan and Patti North, Please Don't Talk AboutMe When I'm Gone Don't Look Rack (Capi-tol) Molly Bee, I'm Sorry I Made You Cryl-ock | p Your Heart (M G Ml Connie Francia;Po Po Hey Eula i Decea) Marty Wilson.

High fidelity Deportment•Music for a Shining Hour (M-G-M) Gary

Alan; Marjorie MorningsUr (Victor) OriginalSoundtrack Recording; Souvenir DTtalie

(M-C-ll) The Satin Strings, Leroy Holmes*Sticks and Ktenes (Vik) Marty Gold; The MillsBrothers la HI fl: Barbershops Ballads (Dacca)Mills Bros; With a l.mte Bit ef String (Victor)Helen Ward with "Peanuts’' Hiaeko.

ScholarshipsAt St. Peter'sJERSEY CITY Eight New

[Jersey high school seniors are

among the 16 full scholarshipI winners at St. Peter's College forthe term heginning in September

Exactly half the number are

June graduates of St. Peter's

Prep: James B. Heaney and Phil iip Campana of Jersey City, William Sullivan of Harrison and

George Kornett of Bergenfield ;The others include Patrick Cas

sidy of Atlantic Highlands (RedBank Catholic), John Dwyer ofMarist (Bayonne), Edward Clas-sick of Roseland (Immaculate

Conception) and John Zeman of

Ridgefield (Regia).

ParishCYO Briefs

St. Bridget’s (Jersey City)will hold a “family night" May24, with a buffet dinner servedto the parents of seniors andtheir guests, one-time membersof the group Highlighting the

evening will be the showing ofmovies and slides on the ac-

tivities of the St Bridget's sen-

iors.

A May crowning and recep-tion will be held at St. Pat-rick’s (Newark) on May 25, bythe Sodality, with Marian P

Spera having the honor of

crowning the statue of Our

Lady. Msgr James F I-oonev,administrator, will celebrate

Benediction after recitation ofthe living rosary.

Juniors at St. Michael's (Eliz-abeth) will have a summer pro-gram including weekly outings

They will nominate candidatesfor office May 25 and hold the

elections June 9 at the season s

final meetingThe Carroll Club of St. Ml

rhael's (Union) postponed its

Day of Recollection to June *

Also at this parish, Jean Zrehiec has been elected prefectof the junior CYO Sodality, withCatherine Reynolds, Geraldine

McNulty, Rarhara Wirtz and

Margaret McCormick in theother posts The juniors havescheduled an awards night and

open house June 9

Ray I>ewandnwfki has beenelected president of the Juniorsat St. James (Springfield), as

slated by Judy Ka>e, Muriel

Stone, and Joseph Eiczko A

picnic on the parish grounds

during the first week nf Junewill conclude activities for this

season

St. Anthony’s (Belleville) willhave a bus ride to Rye Beach

on V 30 and a rake aale is

being held May 25 after eachMast tn raise funds for otheractivities . More than 1000attended the “Salute to Cath-olic Youth’’ night at St. Pan’s

(Greensill', at which the parishhonored Its CYO champs of

the pail season

Vocation Notes

One-Way TrafficBy Msgr. William F. Furlong

“Even if I die here on the road, I will not go back.” Thatwas the almost defiant answer given by Father Serra to theleader of the Spanish military expedition into California in1769. Don Gaspar, the Spanish officer, had commanded thatFather Serra be carried back to the mission because he was inviolent pain. It was the result of a leg infection so severe that

it seemed quite likely that the priest would

never walk again. He had gone with the expedi-tion in the hope of making converts among the,Indians, and he refused to give even the slight-est thought to going back. Hs continued thejourney on a stretcher!

Some time later when the expedition was

seemingly a failure, when the last few Spanishsurvivors were preparing to leave California,Father Serra again told the Spanish officer:“Even if all of you go back, I intend to stayhere ” We can understand why so many said

of him, “Father Junipero is indeed a saintly'man . t . but, . .

he is an annoying saint." All saints, however, are annoyingthey annoy our conscience because we do not have the couragethey had.

According to Father Serra all roads through life should beoneway streets—one way—ahead! The motto which guided himthroughout his life can be found in a farewell letter to hi*parents, as he left in 1749 for the missions of America “Alwaysto go forward and never to go hack.”

Fidelity to that motto resulted in Father Serra's statuebeing set up in the National Hall of Statuary in Washington asCalifornia’s most representative citizen, More than that, itresulted in more than 100,000 Indians coming into the one trueChurch. It resulted also in the introduction of the cause of hiscanonization in 1934. “In Sanctity in America," ArchbishopCicognani, our Apostolic Delegate, says of Father Serra, "Hedied as he had lived—a saint."

Anyone can be a saint by following Father Serra's motto.One of the basic principles of the spiritual life is that we mustconstantly forge ahead. We may never stop or even pause, forto stop is to go back.

The world needs several hundred thousands of priests,Sisters and Brothers. W hy? Because in the past, several hund-red thousands of young men and young women have lost theirvocations. Nor was the loss sudden It was gradual. It resultedfrom a gradual “going hack" in the spiritual life.

You who have been called by God to the priesthood orreligious life, are you better than you were yesterday, or lastweek,'or last month, or last year’ If you are not. you are

' going back”—you are losing your vocation!Apostolate for Vocations.

Newark Archdiocese: Msgr William K. Furlong, Seton HallUniversity, South Orange, N ,1. Telephone SOuth Orange 2-9000

Paterson Diocese: Msgr Edward .1 Scully, 24 He Grasse St .Faterson. Telephone: Mountain View R 1605

Parish Awards for Union CYOELIZABETH - The Union

County CYO wall present awards

to its most active parishes at-theannual Night of Champions, June

10, at St Michael's parish hall.In addition, Awards of Merit,

lapel pins, will he presented to

outstanding members of parishCYO units. Adult leaders will sub-

mit candidates for the honors on

the basis of two for each 50 reg-

: istered members There will al-

so be one award for each parishto an adult leader.

May 24,1958 THE ADVOCATE 17

G.l.'s GRADUATESM#n 17-16

You are NOT TOO LATE

to start studying Latin

Specie/ Courses

Beginning July 1

Join Don Botco's

Saletians to work

for Youth at a

Prio»t or TeachingBrother.

0.1. Approval

Write for Reverend Father Director

DON BOSCO SEMINARYNEWTON. NSW JERSEY

‘ScOHKC <Z

Pallottine Priestor Brother

• CHOOSE a caraar that epelli a

lift of conaacration and aarvica lo

God and naighbor. Tha PallottineFathart engage in Univartal Apoa-

.tolate Foreign Miaaiont, Teach-

ing, Pariah Work, Preaching Home

Miaaiont, Conducting Ratraata. 7htJoy* of Chriit urt*t ui on!

Wrile today hr Information!

Director of Vocations

Pallottine Fathers 'Voov.nci3m N PACA SI —eALTIMORF I, HD

The Oratorian FathersWork for conversionsin South Caroline with

.the Priests and Broth-

ers of the Concrete-; tlon of the Oratoryof St. Philip Neri! The

Oratorians live a

community lift; do not

take vows; preach,teach, conduct parish-

es and do pioneer mission workat home. I.ack of funds is no ob-

stacle. Hifh School Graduates ac-

cepted as candidates for Priesthood.

Brotherhood candidates accepted af-

ter their 16th birthday. For com-

plete Information, write:

REV. DIRECTOR OF VOCATION!The Oratory of *t. Philip Neri,

P.0.80xIff • Deet. 4, Rock HIM, SC.

MARYSERVE her at a

MARIST BROTHER

in the Society of Mary

tov. Director of Brothers, S.M.

St. Mary's Manor

Ponndol, P«nn.

Benedictine Missionaries iirr.VV™foung m«n who feel colled to the monastic and missionary lift os

priests and Brothers of the Order of St. Benedict may apply. Make op

courses for those lacking Latin.

FATHER RECTOR - Sf. Paul's Abbey - Newton, N. J.

THE FRANCISCAN FATHERSThird Order Regular of St. Francis

Offer to Young Men and Boy* - special opportunity*

to *tudy for the Priesthood. Lack of funds no obstacle.

For further information, write to

FATHER STEPHEN, T.O.R.

Franciscan Preparatory Seminary

P. O. Bo* 289, Hollidaysburg 11, Penna.

BOYS WANTEDHIGH SCHOOL -.COLLEGE

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REV. FATHER DIRECTOR -CAPUCHIN FATHERS

Immaculato Heart of Mary Seminary, Gontva, N. T.

THE

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SOUTH AMERICA BOUND: Three officials of Catho-licRelief Services—NCWC are bid bon voyage in New

York by Msgr. Edward E. Swanstrom (right), executive

director, as they leave for a three-week trip to studyrelief needs in South America and Mexico. Includedin the group is Margaret Connellan of Westwood.Others are Edward M. Kinney and Msgr. Aloysius J.

Wycislo, assistant executive director.

6 Benedictines From St. Mary’s AbbeyWill Be Ordained in Paterson May 31

PATERSON Six Benedictine monks of St. Mary’sAbbey, Morristown will be ordained to the priesthood inSt. John’s Cathedral here on May 31 at 9 a.m. by BishopMcNulty. All made profession of vows at St. Benedict’sAbbey, Atchison, Kan., completed theological studies at St.Mary’s Abbey and served on the

faculty of Delbarton School, Mor-ristown.

The ordinandi are Rev. ThomasConfroy, 0.5.8., Rev. Benet Wil-liam Caffrey, 0.5.8., Rev. ConallRichard Coughlin, 0.5.8., Rev.Brian Hugh Clarke, 0.5.8., Rev.Joachim Benedict Schweitzer,0.5.8., and Rev. Aquinas ThomasFay, 0.5.8.

Father ConfroyRev. Thomas Confroy, 0.5.8.,

u the son of Mr. Edward A. Con-

froy, Sr., of 388 Sanford Ave„Newark and the late Mrs. Con-froy. He attended St. Benedict’s

Prep, Newark, and St. Vincent’s

College, Latrobe, Penn. He madehis profession of vows on July11. 1952.

Father Thomas will celebratehis first Mass at 10 a.m. June 1in Sacred Heart Church, Vails-

burg. Archpriest will be his

brother, Rev. Mark Confroy,

0.5.8., guidance director at St.Benedict’* Prep. Deacon and sub-

deacon will be Rev. Dunstan

Smith, 0.5.8., of St. Benedict’sand Rev. Owen Garrigan of SetonHall University. Master of cere-

monies will be Rev. Arthur An-derson of the Diocese of Camden.The preacher will be Rev. Ar-thur Mayer, 0.5.8., of DelbartonSchool, Morristown.

Father CaffreyRev. Benet William Caffrey,

0.5.8., is the son of Dr. and Mrs.William E. Caffrey, 61 HellerParkway, Newark. He attendedSt. Benedict’s Prep and St. Vin-cent’s College. Father Benet was

professed on July 11, 1952.

Father Benet will celebrate his

first Mass at noon June 1 in Our

Lady of Good Counsel Church,Newark. Archpriest will be Msgr.John Weisbrod, pastor. Deaconand subdeacon will be Rev. Mar-

tin Burne, 0.5.8., and Rev. Jer-

ome Fitzpatrick, 0.5.8., of St.Benedict’s Prep, The preacherwill be Rev. Denys Hennessey,0.5.8., of St. Mary’s Abbey, Mor-ristown.

Father ClarkeRev. Brian Hugh Clarke, is the

son of Mr. and Mrs. Patrick

Clarke of 935 Madison Ave.; Eliz-

abeth. Father Brian attended St.Benedict’s Prep and St. Vincent’s

College. He was professed Sept.8, 1952.

Father Brian will celebrate hisfirst Mass at 11:30 a.m. June 8 inSt. Peter’s Chapel, Newark.

Archpriest will be Rev. Louis

Konzelman, administrator. Dea-

con will be Rev. Dunstan Smith,

0.5.8., and Rev. Basil Zusi, 0.

5.8., both of St Benedict’s Prep.Master of ceremonies will be Fra-

ter Gerard Lair, 0.5.8., of St.

Mary’s Abbey, Morristown. The

peached will be Rev. ChristopherLind, 0.5.8., also of the Abbeyin Morristown.

Fr. SchweitzerRev. Joachim Benedict Schweit-

zer is the son of Mr. and Mrs.

Benedict Schweitzer of 158Princeton Ave., Dover. He at-tended Bayley High School, Mor-

ristown, and St. Peter’s College,Jersey City. He made his pro-fession of vows July 11, 1954. He

served in the United States Navyduring World War IIand the Ko-

rean War.

Father Joachim will celebratehis first Mass at noon, June 1 inSt. Mary’s Church, Dover. Arch-

priest will be Rev. Joseph J.

Duffy, pastor. Deacon and sub-deacon will be his brother Rev.

Eugene Schweitzer of St. There-sa’s Church, Paterson, and Rev.David Conway, 0.5.8., of Delbar-

ton School, Morristown. Rev. Jul-ian Varettoni of St. Mary’s will

serve as master of ceremoniesand Father Joachim’s brothers,Ellis and Lt. Hugh Schweitzerwill serve as minor ministers.

Father CoughlinRev. Conall Richard Coughlin,

O. is the son of Mr. PeterP. Coughlin of 785 Mosswood

Ove., South Orange, and the lateMrs. Coughlin. He attended St.Benedict’s Prep and St. Vincent’s

College. Father Conall was pro-fessed Sept. 8, 1952.

He will celebrate his first Massat noon June i, in Our Lady ofthe Valley Church, Orange. Arch-

priest will be Msgr. John J. Fee-

ley, administrator. Deacon and

subdeacon will be .Rev. ThomasA. Gillick of St. Rose of Lima,Short Hills, and Rev. Gabriel Co-

less, 0.5.8., of St. Benedict’s.

The preacher will be, Rev, Eu-

gene Schwarz, 0.5.8., also of St.

Benedict’s. Master of ceremo-

nies will be Brother Paul Man-

gan, 0.5.8., of St. Paul’s Ab-

bey, Newton. The minor min-

isters will be Brother James Kon-

chalski, 0.5.8., Mr. Raymond Mc-

Keon and Mr. Richard Liddy.

Father FayRev. Aquinas Thomas Fay, 0.

5.8., is the son of Mrs. Theresa

Fay, 818 Shaw St., Utica, N. Y.,andthe late Mr. Thomas Fay. Heattended St Francis High School,

Utica, St. Vincent’* College andCatholic University of America,Washington. He was professedOct. 2, 1954.

Father Aquinas will celebratehis first Mass at 10:30 a.m. June

8, in St. Joseph’s Church, Utica,New York.

Archpriest will be Rev. Alexan-

der M. Sheridan, 0.F.M., Conv.,pastor. Deacon and subdeacon

will be Rev. Christian Casper, 0.

5.8., and Rev. Benet Caffrey, 0.

5.8., both of St. Mary’s Abbey,Morristown. The peacher will be

Rev. Hugh Duffy, 0.5.8., of Del-

barton School, Morristown.

Break Ground for

Villa Marie WingNORTH PLAINFIELD—Ground

was broken May 18 for anew

wing at Villa Marie here. Offi-

ciating at the groundbreakingwas Mother M. Melitta of theServants of the Holy Infancy. The

ground was blessed by Rev. Wal-

ter T. Doyle, resident chaplain,who also celebrated Benedictionof the Blessed Sacrament.

The new facility expected to

cost about $400,000 will have 43

rooms. An auxiliary has beenformed whieh will attempt toraise the necessary funds. This

year through use of mite boxesand a bazaar in the Fall, themembers hope to achieve a goalol $30,000.

Fatima Novena

In Jersey CityJERSEY CITY The annual

aolemn novena in honor of Our

Lady of Fatima in Our Lady ofSorrow* Church here started May22 and will continue for nine con-

secutive evening* until May 30,according to Rev V Laurence

Cardelichio, pastor.Devotion* each evening at T 30

p m will consist of a sermon,each given by a different priestof the Archdiocese of Newark,novena prayers and Benedictionof the Blessed Sacrament. •

The solemn novena will close

May 30 with an outdoor candle-light procession and outdoor Ben-

ediction on the church grounds.The serihon will bo delivered byAuailiary Bishop Walter W. Cur-

Us.

Bloomfield HolyHour to Honor

Holy SpiritBLOOMFIELD A Holy Hour

in honor of the Holy Spirit willbe held at 4 p m., May 25, inSacred Heart Church here. With

participation by the honor guardof the fourth degree, Knights ofColumbus, the parish societiesand the Catholic Daughters of

America, the service will he pre-ceded by a three-block processionto the Church.

At the church, a banner honor-ing the Holy Spirit will be blessed

by Msgr. Thomas F. Burke,pastor. Rev. Louis Buffoni of theSons of the Sacred Heart will bemaster of ceremonies.

The sermon will be preachedby Rev. Charles O’Connor, St.

Aloysius, Newark. Rev. John Sul-

livan. O F M, chaplain, St. Mary’sHospital, Hoboken, will celebrateBenediction of the Blessed Sacra-ment.

Following the Holy Hour a ban

quet will be held in Sacred Heart

auditorium. The speakers will beFather Buffoni and IrvingAbramowitx, a convert.

Father Rischmann

Honored at DinnerROSELLE Over 600 parish-

ioners of Assumption parish at-tended a testimonial dinner (orRev Edward J. Rischmann on his10th anniversary of ordination

Sunday at the Elisabeth Elks.

Toastmaster was Rev. James MGarvie. Speakers were Rev. Se-bastian Chiego, pastor; Rev.Thomas Coffey of Notre Dame

High School. Trenton; and Mrs.John Suskie. Rosary Society presi-dent.

CATHOLICS ABE obliged tocontribute to the support of theirparish.

Fr. DonnellyNotes JubileeJERSEY CITY His sil-

ver jubilee in the priesthoodwill be observed by Rev. Jo-

seph L. Donnelly, pastor ofSt. Mary’s, Jersey City, on

May 25.With Archbishop Boland presid-

ing, Father Donnelly will cele-brate his Solemn Mass of Thanks-

giving at 12:15 p.m.Father Donnelly was born in

Newark, son of Anna E. DoranDonnelly and the late James

Donnelly. He attended HolyName School, East Orange; Se-ton Hall University and Immac-ulate Conception Seminary. He

was ordained on June 10, 1933.After ordination he served as

assistant at St. Mary’s, JerseyCity, and St. Michael’s, Cranford.

He was appointed pastor of St.Mary’s, effective July 6, 1957.

Name Cana CouncilAt St. Philomena'sLIVINGSTON Mr. and Mrs.

Joseph Touhey were named keycouple of St. Philomena’s Cana

group at a recent dinner at whichthe year’s program was outlined.

Others on the council are: Mr.

and Mrs. A1 Zipp, Mr. and Mrs.John. Kenny, Mr. and Mrs. Paul

Dillon; Mr. and Mrs. Stan Mager-sky, Mr. and Mrs. Manny Palmer,Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Carey, Mr.and Mrs. Richard Nelson, Mr. and

Mrs. Joseph Mittl, and Mr. and

Mrs. Donald Jacobsen.

Chapel Taken Down,

Then Reconstructed

SYDNEY, Australia (NC) A

chapel here in which the body of

the French martyr, St. Peter

Chanel, lay for nine months, hasbeen taken down and reconstruct-

ed stone by stone in a town 200

miles away.

IT ALL HELPS: Shown presenting a $1,000bond to

Rev. Michael I. Fronczak, liaison officer of the Seton

Hall College of Medicine and Dentistry, is Dr. EmilieRundlett of the Medical Center staff. Dr. Francesco A.

Figurelli, professor of psychiatry, looks on at the

presentation which was in observance of‘Mental Health

weeks. '

Anniversary Set

By CCD GroupJERSEY CITY-The Confrater-

nity of. Christian Doctrine of St.

Joseph's parish here will hold a

rally day on June 8 to markthe first anniversary of the unit’s

organization.The program will open with a

special Mass at 10:30 am., atwhich Auxiliary Bishop WalterW. Curtis will preside. He is

archdiocesan director of the Con-

fraternity.That evening Bishop Curtis will

be guest of honor at a receptionand dance in the William L. Dick-inson High School.

SUPPORT church charities.

List Bishop O’Gara

For Oriel BreakfastNEWARK Bishop Cuthbert

O’Gara, C.P., of Yuanling, China,will be the principal speaker May24 at a Communior) breakfast at

Oriel House, 72 Park Ave.

The breakfast will follow a me-

morial Mass at 10 a.m. at the

Church of Our Savior for the

late Bishop Ford and Sen. Jo-

seph McCarthy. Bishop O’Gara

will be celebrant of the Mass;

18 THE ADVOCATE May 24,1958

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Memorial Day:The office of The Advocatewill be closed on May 30, Mem-orial Day. ..

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“NEITHER FLAME NOR WATER...”writes the Coptic Patriarch, “could destroy our Cathedral in Cairo.It haa survived, Arc, Rood and war. It haa come through all manner

of peril*—BUT—the grace of God la slow-ly destroying It! After nearly a century

of service It can no longer contain tbo

rapidly growing number of converts. Will

you help us to build anew Cathedral.”Well, this la pretty much what you must

expect when sealous priests work amongpeople of good will for almost a hundred

years. These poor people have contributedbeyond their mean* and have almost

succeeded In paying for the new build-

The HeJy Ftlher) Musxm Aid ,B*- Almost—they are now S3.OM short of

br civ n.,1n ltha total amount. Will you help to finish

yw unmuiumnbneed »J.MO! ,

O

A STRONG NATIVE CLERGY IS THE HOPE Or THE CHURCH

IN THE NEAR EAST . . . WILL YOU HELP TO EDUCATE A. . PRIEST? START TODAY!

HOW HIGH IS UP . . . HOW MUCH IS BIG ..

. these are ques-tions which can confuse a child . . . but they are no )ok* . ,

. andthey don’t confuse the families of JOSEPH and ,MICHAEL. They ean tell you hew mnch la “big.”Hums they are willing to make a truly “big” Isacrifice and allow their sons to become priests.

And because they are very poor families they

will certainly miss the money these boys could

nan. But, God haa spoken—they have heard—-

•bey will obey. Michael and Joseph, however, ]need a generous benefactor who la willing*• MH a year for each for the six year seminary course. Wouldyou like to have priest In the family? Here Is an opportunity. Younaay pay the money In any manner convenient while your "adoptedson'’ prepares himself to bring the word of Christ to his country

>5 rw

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YOUR WILL BECOMES THE WILL Or GOD WHEN YOU MEN-TION HIS MISSIONS OP THE NEAR EAST IN YOUR LAST

WILL...DO IT TODAY!

THE MYSTERIOUS CITY OP BAGHDADIs no mystery to Rlsler Alexander and SlaterClotilda. They know It well ...at a matterof fart they knew It a* well they wish to de-

vote thslr live* to making Christ known andlofed there. They are anxious to becomeDaughter* ef Mary Immaculate. But first, they

must have two years sf novitiate training at

total rotl of 1100 for etch. If you wouldlike to have a “nun la the family," you may

one of these girls. You ran pay the IJOO In any form con-

venient while your daughter ta Chrtst prepares herself to bring thsMYSTERY of Christ to the MYSTERIOUS CITY.

BTRINGLESSGIFTS GIVE THE HOLY FATHER A FREE HANDTO HELP THE POOR OP CHRIST. STRENGTHEN HIS HAND

TODAY.

“TWAS A PINE DAY ...the crowds were hap-py and singing ...the Church was beautiful . .

but the little girl was sad. It was her FIRST COM-MUNION DAY and she did not have anew dress!Tun know how little girls are about such things!WUI you auks her happy? Ten dollars will buy a

now outfit for a refugee child on FIRST COMMU-NION DAY!

GIFT CARD SUGGESTIONS for our mission rhapela. The Houseof God Is In great need Will you help by the donation of an article

...ws will send our beautiful GIFT CARD anywhere In the world to

notify that apodal friend or relative of your offering for hts Inten-tion.

ll2ear£ist(nissioi2sitt)FRANCIS CARDINAL «SPIIIMAN. President.

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SERVING THE ULTIMATE in ItalianPaadt. All faadt cooked par ordtr

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THREE CROWNS RESTAURANTSMORGASBORD

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Ciosto WEDNESDAYS

CWV to Present Annual AwardsTo Mitchell, Fr. Halton, Weiss

NEWARK -- A member of the President’s Cabinet, a

priest, and a Catholic editor are the recipients of this year’sawards of the New Jersey Catholic War Veterans. Tradi.

"For God ’’

e

a3mZa <?P°n 3kes three such awards> one

wnm

G°d’

th For Countl7,” and the third, “ForHome.”The awards will be presented

June 7 in Atlantic City at theformal banquet of the New Jer-sey CWV, highlight of the annualconvention to be held at the Am-bassador Hotel from June 6 to 8.

Cited in the award “For God”is Rev. Hugh Halton, 0.P.., direc-tor of Aquinas FoundationPrinceton. The award “For Coun-try” will be presented to JamesP. Mitchell, U. S. Secretary ofLabor. Vincent A. Weiss, manag-ing editor of The Monitor, news-

paper of the Diocese of Trentonwill receive the award “ForHome.”

FATHER HALTON will be theprincipal speaker at the conven-tion banquet which will also beaddressed by Dr. Elizabeth M.Kelly, Newark assistant superin-tendent of schools in charge of

special services.

This year’s session will alsomark the 10th anniversary of theState Ladies’ Auxiliary Board.Mrs. Geraldine Panigrosso. state

auxiliary president, and Albert J.Schwind, CWV state commander,will preside at the sessions oftheir respective groups.

The convention will officiallyopen at 3 p.m., June 6, with a

major session taking place at 7P.m., at which time the reportsof officers, resolutions and otherbusiness will transpire.

On June 7, there will be a joint,meeting of both men’s and worn-en s groups at which organization

awards for both groups will be

presented. This meeting will beat 9:30 a.m.

Election of officers and theirinstallation will be the principalbusiness of the session starting at1 p.m. The banquet will start at6:30 p.m., to be followed by a

dance.

. THE ANNUAL convention will

wind up Sunday, June 8, with the

annual Communion Mass at 11

am., in Our Lady Star of the Sea

Church, Memorial Hall.

Celebrant of the Mass will beRev. Aloysius S. Carney, statechaplain. Deacon and subdeaconwill be Rev. Daniel Giorgi, state

auxiliary chaplain, and Rev. Ed-

ward C. Powell, chaplain of St.

Christopher Post.

At the conclusion of the Mass,the delegates will be addressed

by Rev. Martin B. McMahon, pas-tor of St. James, Ventnor, as the

representative of Bishop JustinJ. McCarthy of Camden, unableto attend because of a prior com-

mitment.

Confederate libraryGets Priest’s Book

<(

HOT SPRINGS, Ark. (NC)“Chaplain in Gray,” by the lateRev. H. J. Heagney, based onthe life of Rev. Abram Ryan,priest-poet, will be placed in a

library of Confederate books tobe established in Richmond, Va.

After serving as a chaplain inthe Confederate Army during theWar Between the States, FatherRyan devoted his time to writingand travels through the war-tornSouth. Father Ryan’s “ConqueredBanner” gained him the title of“poet of the Confederacy.”

GIVE TIME as well as moneyto the Church.

Vatican SignsSea TreatiesGENEVA (RNS)—The Vatican

has signed a convention which

gives the Holy See the right un-

der international law to fly its

flag at sea and to enjoy free-

dom of the seas on anequal foot-

ing with other sovereign states.Also signed by the Vatican was

another convention giving the

Holy See free access to the sea

on the same basis as other land-

locked states.

The conventions were drawn upby the 86-nation Conference on

the Law of the Sea which methere Feb. 24 to Apr. 29. Thefirst convention has already been

approved by 19 countries and thesecond by 20 nations. Dr. Paul

Demeur, professor of law at the

University of Louvain, Belgium,signed the conventions on behalfof the Holy See in his capacityof chief Vatican delegate to theconference.

PROGRESS: Ground will be broken soon for this new facility at St. Francis Hospi-tal, Jersey City. The structure, designed by William Neumann and Sons, is a newnurses’ residence and nursing education unit. The project was announced recently

by Sister M. Bonavita, S.P.S.F., hospital administrator.

Holy Name

Pennsylvania-Long Island Rail-roads The 20th annual Com-munion breakfast will be heldMay 25 at the Hotel Astor, NewYork, after Mass in St. John theBaptit Church. Speakers, Rev.

Ignatius McCormick, 0.F.M.,Cap., director of Sacred HeartHigh School, Yonkers, N.Y. andRev. Claude Burns, 0.F.M., Cap.,the unit’s spiritual director.

Our Lady of Victories, JerseyCity The annual Father-Son

Communion breakfast was held

May 11 in the school hall after 8

a.m. Mass. Speakers were Rev.Arthur McGratty, S.J., LoyolaHouse of Retreats, Morristown,and Don Kennedy, St. Peter’s

College basketball coach. Toast-master was Edward Magee and

co-chairmen, Vincent Manganiel-lo and Richard Alexander.

St. Theresa’s, Kenilworth—Theannual Communion breakfast willbe held May 25 in the schoolcafeteria after 8 a.m. Mass.Speakers will be Rev. Thomas

Tobin, C.SS.R., St. Alphonsus,New York, and John V. Reilly,past president, Union CountyFederation. Frank Helies will betoastmaster.

St. George’s, Paterson Theannual Father-Son Communionbreakfast will be held June 6, inthe high school after 8 a.m. Mass.

Speakers will be Rev. David

Pathe, chaplain. Villa Marie

Claire, Saddle River, and CharlesE. Kleinkauf, special agent, FBI,Newark office. Chairman is Ed-ward Fox.

Denies DelayingDead Sea ScrollsLONDON (NC)— Rev. Roland

de Vaux, 0.P., chief of the ex-

perts examining the Dead SeaScrolls in Jerusalem, said herethat charges made in this coun-

try that he had deliberately de-

layed publication of some scroll!

£re “preposterous.”The Dominican, who has been

in Jerusalem since 1945, said that

“Christianity has nothing tohide, nothing to fear. The truth,whatever it is, cannot be con-

trary to our Faith.”

Father de Vaux came to Lon-don recently to lecture and to ar-

range for the printing of the sec-

ond volume of the scrolls. Theyare ancient documents relatingto late Biblical times which havebeen found during the past dec-ade in caves near the Dead Sea.

The forthcoming book will dealwith the abortive Jewish revolt

against the Romans in the year*132 to 135 A.D.

German AgencyHelps the DyingOSNABRUECK, Germany In

some parts of Germany, six oufof 10 Catholics die without beingable to receive the last sacra-

ments, Bishop Helmut H. Wittierof Osnabrueck said in a pastoralletter praising the work of theMiva Diaspora organization. The

agency is dedicated to bringingthe services of the Church toCatholics in non-Catholic areas.

Thd Bishop called attention tothe chapels onwheels which havebeen provided by the organiza-tion and by other groups inter-ested in sustaining and spreadingthe Faith.

Bishop Wittier also blessed 26Volkswagen!, gifts of the Miva

Diaspora organization. They willbe used by priests in areas whereCatholics are widely scattered.

YOUR DONATIONS makeCatholic charity projects possi-ble.

Delegate in WarningOn Godless Education

BOSTON (NC) Leaving God out of education leadsto “the greatest detriment of man and to the deteriorationor even destruction of his dignity,” Archbishop Amleto Gio-vanni Cicognani, Apostolic Delegate to the U. S

,has

warned.

The combination “God and

Man” is inseparable and must be

so "in the school as elsewhere,”the Archbishop said in an address

at Boston College. ArchbishopCicognani received an honorarydoctorate of laws from the uni-

versity in honor of his double

silver jubilee as a Bishop and

Apostolic Delegate to this coun-

try.

WHILE IT IS true, he said,that man is “the product of the

family, the country and the

school,” it must always be re-

membered that prior to this

“man is a product of God.”

"The human soul comes from

God and is directed to God,”he said. "Neither the individ-

ual, nor the family, nor theschool nor country must forgetthis.”

The Archbishop asserted that

the “true purpose of life is torealize more and more on the

physical-ethical level” man’s re-

semblance to God. "Man must

therefore add to his technologicaland literary acquisitions the

knowledge of those things which

give a norm to his life in the

family, in the professions and as

an individual,” he said.

He added: “Every system of

philosophy from which God is

eliminated practically falls into

materialism, even though it may

put forth idealistic theories or

try to follow a so-called middleof the road policy by saying, ‘Wedo not know.’ It remains tied to

the investigation of created mat-

ter and fails to transcend the

earth.”

THE ARCHBISHOP recalled

that, despite the testimony whichmaterial creation gives to theexistence of God, its Creator,there remain "not a few who re-

fuse to think about the Author,

or question or deny Him, or ex-

press the opinion that scienceand faith are irreconcilable.”

“There is,” Archbishop Cicog-nani declared, "no contradictionnor opposition between scienceand faith, a fact which has been

repeated with confidence forcenturies.”

Cana Calendar

CONFERENCES

Sunday. May IS

Wealflald. Holy Trinity. Annual. S 30pm. AD 24243.

Kaarny, St. Cacilia. Annual. 2:30 p.m.KE 3-0319.

Harrtaon. Holy Croaa. Cana n. S3O

p.m. HU 4-3831.

Rtdscflcld. St. Matthaw. Cana 11. 1P.m. WH 5-0729

Lodi. St. Joaaph. Cana 111. 7 pm.GR 2-4303.

Bayonne. St. Joaaph. Cana 111. 7 pm.HE 04920

SUNDAY, JUNO I

Nawark, Sacred Heart (Vallaburf).

Cana Annual. 7:30 pm. ES 4 7093

Garfield. Mt. Vtroln. Cana 11. 7 p.m.GR 25543.

Jertey City. St. Paul. Cana Annual.7 p.m. GE 34741.

Ridgefield. St, Matthaw. Cana H. 7pm WH 54729

Cloatar. St. Mary. Cana 111. 7 pm.CL 54540

PRE-CANA

Juna 14 Falrvtaw. Our Lady of

Grace. CO 14240.

June S-IS—Jereey City. St, John the

BepUet HE 0 5000

June 15-25—Newark. Our Lady of Mt.Carmel. BI 0-4479.

PARENTS’ NIGHT

May 20. Sacred Heart Cathedral.Newark.

Reorganization Set

By Kolping SocietyNEWARK-The Catholic Kol-

ping Society, Newark Branch,will hold a reorganization meet-ing at 8 p m., May 26, at the

Schwabenhslle, 593 SpringfieldAve., here.

The Catholic Kolping Society,founded by Rev. Adolph Kolpingin Cologne, Germany, was estab-lished in the United States more

than 100 years ago.

St. Peters Chemistry DepartmentGiven ‘Unconditional Approval’JERSEY CITY The chemis-

try department of St. Peter’s Col-lege received unconditional ap-proval of the American ChemicalSociety, it was reported this weekin a communication to Very Rev.James J. Shanahan, SJ., collegepresident.

Recently, the department wasstudied by the society's NationalCommittee on Professional Train-

ing at Father Shanahan's invita-tion. The group inspected the fa-cilities of the department, consist-

ing of six student laboratories andprivate research laboratories forthe professorial staff. The de-partment, housed on the top floorof Gannon Hall, was designed bythe late Rev. Arthur liohman

SJ, who headed U when it ec

cupied one of the five classroomsin the downtown Chamber ofCommerce building.

Over the years, St Peter's hassent hundreds of chemists to

graduate schools and to the labor-atories of industry. Siateen alum-ni hold the doctoral degree In

chemistry and at the present time.St Peter's men are on pre-doctorsi fellowships at BrooklynPolytechnic. Brown, Cornell, Du-

quesne, Fordham, Georgetown.Notre Dame, Rutger*. St. Louts

and Wisconsin UniversitiesChairman of the department is

Rev. George J. Htladorf, S J

Other staff members are Dr.

Thomas N. Dodd. Dr. Perry Y

Jackson, Dr. Charles E. McCauley 1and Frederick Jacques.

Jubilee, New Church

For Elizabeth ParishELIZABETH Archbishop Boland will lay the corner-

stone for the new church at Immaculate Conception pariahhere at 10:30 a.m. on May 30 and immediately afterwardwill preside at a Solemn Mass of Thanksgiving marking the

silver jubilee of the ordination of the pastor, Rev. ThomasJ. Donnelly.

Immaculate Conception parishwas organized in 1907, with Rev.Louis J. Bohl as first pastor.Mass was celebrated in the Elks’

Clubhouse until the originalchurch was built in 1910.

Appointed pastor on Nov. 3,1956, Father Donnelly was faced

with a growing parish and theneed for anew church. Groundfor the new structure was broken

on Mar. 17, 1957, and plans were

made for conversion of the pre-vious church into four class-

rooms for the school.

FATHER DONNELLY was

born in Bayonne. He attended St.Peter’s Prep, Jersey City, SetonHall University and Immaculate

Conception Seminary and was or-

dained on June 10, 1933.

Prior to coming to Immacu-

late Conception he served as as-

sistant at St. Brigid’s, North Ber-

gen, and Our Lady of Sorrow*,South Orange.

Seminarians in Rome

Study Four MoviesROME (NC) The need for

seminarians to realize the spirit-ual problems involved in movies

was stressed at the third motion

picture forum neld at the NorthAmerican College here, with stu-dents making a systematic studyof four outstanding films from

Europe and the U. S.

Hoover Honored

By ChristophersNEW YORK FBI Director

J. Edgar Hoover, author of "Ma»-

ters of Deceit,” a book on com-

munist techniques, has been

named as one of five Christopherbook award winners by Rev.James Keller, M.M., founder of

the movement.

He and other winners of thesemi-annual awards have been

given bronze plaques engravedwith the Christopher motto for

books published in the six-month

period ending Mar. 31.Other authors honored were J.

Donald Adams for ‘TriumphOver Odds,” Charles Fergusonfor “Naked to Mine Enemies,”Oscar Handlin for “A1 Smith andHis America,” and W. A. Swan-

berg for “First Blood—The Storyof Fort Sumter."

May 24,1958 THE ADVOCATE 19

Donahue's Florist170 BLOOMFIELD AVE.

HUmboldt 3-2224NEWARK NEW JERSEY

WASHINGTON FLORISTIncorporated

Since 1906

WEDDING and FUNERAL DESIGNSFlowart TeUgraphtd Anywhnr*

S4S BROAD STREET, NEWARK, N. J.

Mltchtll 2-0421

DON McCRACKENFUNERAL HOME

(formerly the

Frank T. Burn* Home)2)24 ST. GEORGE AVENUE

Elizabeth-Linden Line

Elizabeth 2-3270

Savings Insured to $lO,OOO Earn 3%

home mortgage loans

ALEXANDER HAMILTON SAVINGSand LOAN ASS'N

1 COIT STREET SH 2-«15 PATERSON, N. J.

In Time of Need

Consult Your Catholic Funeral DirectorWhose careful and understandingservice is in accord with the

traditions of Holy Mother Church

ESSEX COUNTY ]CODEY'S FUNERAL SERVICE

69 HIGH STREET

ORANGE, N. J.

ORange 4-7554

:ODEY'S FUNERAL SERVICE77 PARK STREET

MONTCLAIR, N. J.

MOntrlair 2-0005

DE CAPUA FUNERAL HOME

269 MT, PROSPECT AVE.

NEWARK, N. J.

HUmboldt 2-3333

GEORGE AHR & SON700 NYE AVENUE

IRVINGTON, N. J.

ESsex 3-1020

STANTON FUNERAL HOME661 FRANKLIN AVENUE

NUTLEY, N. J.

NUtley 2-3131

JOSEPH P. MURPHY

102 FLEMING AVENUE

NEWARK, N. J.

MArket 3-0514

JOHN F. MURPHY

480 SANFORD AVENUE

NEWARK, N. J.

ESsex 3-6053

ROBERT LEE FUNERAL HOME

394 PARK AVE. cor. High St.

ORANGE, N. J.

OR 3-0935

JOHN J. QUINN

FUNERAL HOME'

323-329 PARK AVENUE ’

ORANGE, N. J.

ORange 3-6348

FRANK McGEE

525 SUMMER AVENUE

NEWARK, N. J.

HUmboldt 2-2222

MURPHY FUNERAL HOME

GRACF MURPHY, Director

301 ROSEVILLE AVENUE

NEWARK, N. J.

HUmboldt 3-2600

BERNARD A. KANE

FUNERAL HOME

39 HUMBOLDT STREET

NEWARK, N. J.

HUmboldt 3-0733

PETER J. QUINN

Funeral Director

320 BELLEVILLE AVENUE

BLOOMFIELD, N. J.

Pilgrim 8-1260

JOSEPH I. FINNERAN

102 SO. CLINTON STREET

EAST ORANGE, N. J.

ORange 3 0022

L. V. MULLIN & SON

976 BROAD STREET

NEWARK, N. J.

MArket 3-0660

GORNY & GORNYMORTUARY

303 MAIN STREET-EAST ORANGE, N. J.

ORange 2-2414

GORNY & GORNY

MORTUARY

399 HOOVER AVENUE

BLOOMFIELD, N. J.

Pilgrim 3-8400

KIERNAN FUNERAL HOME101 UNION AVENUE

BELLEVILLE, N. J.

PLymouth 9-3503

BERGEN COUNTY

THOMAS J. DIFFIY

41 AMES AVENUE

RUTHERFORD, N. j. 'WEbster 2-0098

HENNESSEYFUNERAL HOME

232 KIPP AVENUE

HASBROUCK HEIGHTS, N. J,

ATIa, 8-1362

TRINKA FUNERAL SERVICE

MAYWOOD - BOGOTALITTLE FERRY

HUbbard 7-3050

THOMAS J. KELLY, Inc.37 WEST MAIN STREET

BERGENFIELD, N. J.

DUmont 4-1286

JOHN J. FEENEY

70 MONMOUTH ROAD

GLEN ROCK, N. J.

MUlberry 4-4396

HUDSON COUNTY

EARL F. BOSWORTH

311 WILLOW AVENUE

HOBOKEN, N. J.

HOboken 3-1455

HOboken 3-1456

NECKER-SHARPEFUNERAL HOME

525 - 45th STREET

UNION CITY, N. J.

UNion 7-0820

UNion 7-0120

LAWRENCE G. FALLON

157 BOWERS STREETJERSEY CITY, N. J.

OLdfield 9-0579

james a. McLaughlin

591 JERSEY AVENUE

JERSEY CITY, N. J.

JOurnal Square 2-2266

HOWARD J. BRENNAN" 6414 BERGENLINE AVE.

WEST NEW YORK, N. J.

UNion 7-0373

RIEMAN FUNERAL HOME

1914 NEW YORK AVENUE

UNION CITY, N. J.

UNion 7-6767

WILLIAM SCHLEMM, Inc.

JERSEY CITY UNION CITY

UNion 7-1000

LEBER FUNERAL HOME2000 HUDSON BOULEVARD

UNION CITY, N. J.

UNion 3-1100

UNION COUNTY

DANIEL J. LEONARD A SONS

MORTUARY242 WEST JERSEY STREET

"

ELIZABETH, N. J.

ELizabeth 2-5331

MILLER FUNERAL HOMELoo F. Bannworth, Director

1055 EAST JERSEY ST.

ELIZABETH, N. J.

EL 2-6664

PATRICK & WERSON635 NORTH WOOD AVENUE

LINDEN, N. J.Linden 3-4119

GORNY & GORNY

MORTUARY

330 ELIZABETH AVENUE

ELIZABETH, N. J.

ELizabeth 2-1415

GROWNEY FUNERAL HOME1070 NORTH BROAD STREET

HILLSIDE, N. J.

ELizabeth 2-1663

PASSAIC COUNTY

GORMLEY FUNERAL HOME

154 WASHINGTON PLACE

PASSAIC, N. J.

PRetcott 9-3183

HENNESSEY FUNERAL HOME171 WASHINGTON PLACE

PASSAIC, N. J.PReecott 7-0141

GORNEY 4 GORNEY

MORTUARY

519 MARSHALL STREET

-PATERSON, N. J.

MUlberry 4-S4OO

QUINLAN FUNERAL HOME27-29 HARDING AVENUE

CLIFTON, N. J.PRetcott 7-3002 '

Par listing in this Mdinn call Thn AdvntaN, MArfcnt 4-0700

CLASSIFIED DIRECTORYFor information regarding an AD in this Directory Call

MArket 4-0700 and ask for Classified Advertising

APPLIANCES

REPAIRSRADIOS HI-FI

TOASTERS IRONS

BROILERS

And All Household Electrical

Appliances at Low Prices

AMHERSTAPPLIANCE & SUPPLY CO.

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ORange 3-783# EAST ORANGE

SUPREME APPLIANCE SERVICEALL AUTOMATIC WASHING MA-CHINES REPAIRED: GAS AND ELEC-TRIC CLOTHES DRYERS REPAIRED.Garfield. N. J. PRcacott 88080

FABRICS

FABRICS

Special nylon n«t 73" wide, 39c ayard. Designer’s lengths. Sample cuta InImported pure atlk. Itnena and cottoni

at leaa than half price.

THE REMNANT MART

83 SOMERSET STREET

PLAINFIELD. N. J.

FLORISTS

MAYFAIR FLORISTS"THE HOUSE OF QUALITY FLOWERS"

Joe Core, Prop1030 So. Orange Ave . Newark. N. J.

ESaex 3-0433

HELP WANTED MALE-FEMALE

SUMMER poaitlon. excellent opportunityfor an ambltloua teacher or advancedcollege Undent $330 for 80 dan. WrtleBoa 138. The Advocate. 31 Clinton St .Newark, N J.

INSURANCE

VINCENT T. RUSSO

INSURANCE

In All It* Branches

272 High St. Nutley. N J

NUtley 20014

_

LUMBER AND FUEL

SPECIALIZING~

IN MU.I.WORK. KITCHENCABINETS. FORMICA TOPS.

WARDROBES AND CORNICES

WOODWARDLumber & Coal Cos.

37 Linnet St . Bayonne FE 0-001!

MONUMENTS

DE PAOLA

MONUMENT COMPANY

For the Flneet In Memorial! Complete!Manufactured in Barre. Vermont•Of Franklin Ave . Newark* N. J.

Hl 'mboldl 3 0013

Future Duplav <>pp Gate of HeavenCemetery

ALBERT H. HOPPER, INC.Manufacturer of

MONUMENTS and MAUSOLEUMS

S3S-J4l Ridge ltd . N Arlington

WYman 1-2266Opp Holy (rose t emeterr

Weare the largeat manufacturer i

memorial* in the state, endere peaatn

on to our cuatomor* e saving* of 30'by soiling direct to purrheeer

MONUMENTS MADE OF GRANITFROM THE ROCK OF AGE* QUARR*■ L. »“ITH QUARRY- BARRE GUILMONUMENT* BRONZE MARKERS -

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PAINTINO a DECORATING

RUDOLF SCHMIDTPaiator. Decorator. Paper Hanger

Art and Antique RaatortngGliding. Churchea and Mural*

Furniture Decorating and rtnlahiniinstitutional Residence. Industrial

Eltortor Painting3i Chestnut Ave. .Summit. N J,

CR J 8877

ONLY THE HIGHEA r Qt Alin VIteciaU. applied hr oaport craftam#

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JOSEPH HANSONFOR GOOD JOB BY MECHANICS

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PICTURES and ART SUPPLIES

JOHN NIGHI.AND

Pleturn and Mirror*

ArtiiU' Material*13 Midland Av*., Montclair. N. J.

Pllarim #-4884

REAL ESTATE FOR SALE

BELLEVILLE

“seeing is believingT* lovely rooms. beautiful modern kitch-

en on Ist. 3 bedroom* and bath on 2nd,

12 car garage convenient location, St.Peter** or Holy Family Church and

School. Call Mr*. Slaco, PI 3-6700.

Eve*, and Sunday*. NU 2^*3l

W. H. RODDY, INC., Realtor21 Lackawanna Place.

Bloomfield. N. J.

FLORIDA

ORMOND BEACH

'Seven mile* North of paytona Beach)New cuatom 3 room house tncludincFlorida room, all new furniture, draw

draperies, rue*, patio, large garage, tile

kitchen, plenty of cabinet*. G C wall

oven, refrigerator, freezer. exhaust fan.

washer and dryer. Tile bath, teraxzofloor* throughout, lot (W by HR ft .fully landscaped, power mower, garden

equipment, many extras, tile roof. highlot overlooking ocean and Halifax river,paved road. Mi block from ocean. Priced

at 619.000. will consider trade in NewJersey Call owner. TEaneck 63136.

SOUTH ORANGE

CATHOLIC DOCTORS!

RESIDENCE & OFFICES

CHOICE LOCATION

Few door* from Our I.ady of Sorrow*Church and School Prominent street.Fine center hail colonial residence onlarge lot. with annex containing beauti

ful modern suite of office* Handy to

all school* and transportation Immedtate possession. Priced right at 631.930•See it today!

RAYMOND CONNOLLY CO

Realtors Call days 4 eves 80 30403

3 West South Orange Ave

Adjoining Buick Showroom

vSUMMIT

SUMMIT $23,900WORTH MUCH MORE. Ilovixr w« ir.

sincere In our appraisal Here is your

opportunity to buy a 3 yearold splitlevel house withs pine panelled recre-ation room, on a quarter acre of land

3 bedrooms. 2 baths. living room, dining,

kitchen. Summit’s better neighborhoodBy appointment only

RICHARD A. MK ONE AGENCY360 Springfield Ave., Summit. N J

( Restview 3 6600

SUMMITi THREE YEAR OLD SPLIT LEVEL

! WITH PINE RECREATION ROOM,

•r1.900

I NEW RANCH HOUSE CUKToMIIED

WITH LUXURY FEATURES

*29.900

VICINITY J

RANCHO

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UUil.Ua 1 MOO

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t Heatview 14600

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C‘» MA 441700

The Church in New JerseyThis statistical resume of the Church in New Jersey is taken from the 1958 Official Direc-

tory, published by P. J.Kennedy & Sons.

NEWARK PATERSON NEW JERSEY1957 1958 1957 1958 1957 1958

Priests '1,006 1,025 ' 272 303 1,906 1,977

Diocesan Priests 676 697 137 135 1,273 1 321Parishes J. 234 234 78 82 558 564Chapels 272 273 91 91 554 549Brothers 81 91 97 89 223 225Sisters 3,665 3,126 1,283 1,286 6,896 6 384Seminarians 226 235 285 314 1 190 l’l2lCollege Students 11,164 10,372 1,312 1,942 12,724 12519High Schools 50 51 19 19 92 ’94High School Students 15,852 17,966

'

3,679 4,542 30927 35 123Grammar Schools 202 215 54 58 ’397 ’423Grammar School Students 111,995 122,206 20,713 22,209 205758 222 227Orphanages, Asylums 11 12 33 ’ 15 ’Children in Orphanages 872 895 60 85 1082 1133Hospitals ■ .9 9 4 4 17 17Bed Capacity 2,438 2,224 1,062 1,075 4 493 4 269Patients Treated 155,038 175,491 66,209 68,874 321642 363’663Pupils Attending CCD Classes 64,730 79,670 14,097 17 253 120 585 14550Children Under Instruction 204,714 230,549 40,003 46 414 371379 415853£*«!»«•* 3,923 4,093

793 857 6>ol 7041

f *PU™ S 35-558 35,299 7,055'

7,318 65,264 66262Infant Baptisms 33,660 33,680 ' 6,656 6,894 61,309 62 583Converts 1,898 1,619 399 424 3,955 3^679Marriages 10,106 9,940 1,859 1,918 17,241 17 209Deaths 9,747 10,354 1,762 1788 15 950 16 796Catholic Population 1,259,121 1,324,066 192,814 201,628 2,100,412 2 152 435Total Population 2,607,649 2,791,000 536,729 536,729 4,944,483 5!136,508

Court Rules for TransportationFor All Parochial StudentsTRENTON—PubIic school bus-

ts carrying children to junior andsenior high schools ifiay also car-

ry children to parochial elemen-

tary schools, the State SupremeCourt ruled here in a 6-1 deci-

sion.

The .decision reversed a rulingof September, 1957, by the State

Board of Education, which heldthat the Ocean County Central

Regional Board of Educationcould not provide transportationfor pupils from kindergarten

through sixth grade in St. Jo-seph’s School, Toms River.

IN THE DECISION handeddown here, Justice Nathan L. Jacobs of the state supreme courtruled that under the law “when-

ever in any district there arechildren living remote from any

schoolhouse the board of educa-tion of the district may makerules and contracts for the trans-portation of such children to andfrom school, including .the trans-

portation of school children toand from schools other than, a

public school, except such school

as is operated for profit in whole

or in part.”The Ocean County Central Re-

gional Board was set up to edu-cate children from the seventhto 12th grade in its Bayvilleschool. The question before the

Supreme Court was whether the

school board could furnish trans-

portation for parochial schoolchildren below these grades.

The court's decision rules it

legal for sonle 100 pupils of St.

Joseph’s School who are below

the seventh grade to ride buses

provided by the school board.

The case was originallybrought up when a resident ofthe Ocean County school districtsent a letter of complaiqt toFrederic** M. Raubinßer, state

commissioner of education, aboutthe transportation of Catholicschool children in Ocean County.

On Feb. 4, 1957, the commis-sioner advised the Ocean CountyCentral Regional Board of Edu-cation that it was not authorized

to provide transportation for pu-

pils of lower grade than those

for which the regional districtwas organized.

ON APR. 8, 1957, Commission-er Raubinger wrote a letter tothe regional board, noting thatthe board had continued to pro-vide transportation for the lower

grade pupils.He stated that If the board

did not discontinue the prac-tice the county superintendentof schools would be obliged to

disapprove its transportation of

pupils, and that state aid couldnot be paid on disapprovedtransportation.On May 7, 1957, the regional

school board appealed this rul-

ing to the state board of educa-

tion, which affirmed the commis-sioner's action. Subsequently theschool board appealed to the Ap-pelate Division of Superior Court.

The appeal was withdrawn when

a resident of Seaside Heights,the father of two children attend-

ing St. Joseph’s School, was per-mitted to intervene as a partyappelant.

Dispensation for

Memorial DayWednesday, Friday and Sat-

nrday, May 28, SO and 31 are

Ember Days.In virtue of special faculties

from the Holy See, ArchbishopBoland and Bishop McNultyhave granted a dispensationfrom the fast and abstinence

on Friday, May SO, Memorial

Day, for the Archdiocese ofNewark and the Diocese of Pat-

erson.,

Wednesday, May 28, and Sat-

urday, May 31, are days of fastand partial abstinence. Meat

may be taken once at the prin-cipal meal.

Bloomfield Retreat Draws 80%Of Students Despite Dispute

BLOOMFIELD In the face

of opposition from school author-

ities who refused, to permit ex-

cused absences covering a two-hour period over two days, a re-treat for public school students

was labeled “best ever’’ by its

sponsors.The retreat was held May 13, j

14 and 15 at Sacred Heart Church ihere for seniors attending Bloom-1field and Glen Ridge HighSchools. Officials in these twojtowns refused to allow the stu-j

dents to leave school earlier on

the first two days in order to at-

tend the retreat despite the factthat parents of the students had

requested such excused absences.

CHURCH OFFICIALS from

eight parishes involved feltschool cooperation was necessa-

ry in order to insure attendance

at the retreat. When permission

was refused, although it had

been given in previous years,parents were asked to inform the

schools that their children would

leave school to attend the retreat

anyway.

According to Rev. Thomas

Henry of Sacred Heart, a totalof 189 seniors attended the re-treat. That, he said, was al-most 80% of the /number forwhom the retreat was held. In

previous years when theschools cooperated, attendance

averaged about 70%.

At the retreat, strict attend-

ance records were kept and thelists were forwarded to theschools to avoid the possibilitythat students might take advan-tage of the controversy to skipschool time. That procedure alsohad been followed in other years.

A DAY OF Recollection for

sophomore and junior students

was held on the 15th, Ascension

Thursday, following the closingof the genior retreat. Sehool co-

operation was not necessary onthat day as state law makes ex-

cused absences mandatory on

such days. A total of 411 juniorsand sophomores attended thoseservices.

Students affected by the dis-

pute came from Sacred Heart,St. Thomas the Apostle and St.

Valentine’s, Bloomfield; St. Cath-erine of Siena, Cedar Grove; St.Francis Xavier, Newark; St. An-

thony’s, Belleville, and HolyName and All Souls, East Or-

ange.

JAMMED RETREAT: Seniors from Bloomfield and Glen Ridge High Schools jamSacred Heart Church, Bloomfield, during retreat for which school authorities hadrefused to grant early excused dismissals despite repeated requests from parents.

Catholics in UnionsTold of Obligations

NEW YORK “It is the lot of the Catholic unionmember to instill purpose and give direction to our society,”Secretary of Labor James P. Mitchell said here at a laborCommunion breakfast.

Although the chief purpose of life is the salvation ofof one’s own soul, he said, it isalso incumbent "on the Christian

to better his world,” and Cath-

olic union members have a great-

er opporturiity of doing this thanothers. This is so, he said, be-

cause "they partake of the tra-ditions of Catholic social think-

ing and social action, and* of the

traditions of the American la-

bor movement."

HE OFFERED a four-pointprogram to Catholic unionists,telling them to:

• See that their unions are

guided by Christian principles bybeing active in union affairs.

• Make what they havelearned at the hands of theChurch a part of their daily life.

• Remember to give a fair

day's work for a fair day's pay.

• Be aware of the economicsof the industry in which theywork and consider their demands

in the light of the public good.

MITCHELL SAID that the spir-itual heritage of Catholic union

members gives them abundant

opportunity to heal the breachin the modern world, "torn be-

tween its deep and reverent con-

viction in the truth of the Chris-

tian doctrine and its commitment

to the produce of materialism.”

He warned that our battle

against communism is weak-ened by an “ambiguity of pur-pose that makes us renter

much of our society around ma-

terial goals while our instincts

as Christians demand” a differ-

ent approach.

Meanwhile, he declared, the"communist world displays an

impressive unity of purpose" in

pledging "its full allegiance tomaterial ends."

| CONTRIBUTE TOyour schools,hospitals, and other institutions

I as well as to your parish.

Set HospitalConventionATLANTIC CITY Some

5,000 delegates attending the

Catholic Hospital Association

convention here June 22-26will get a chance to hear ex-

perts in practically every fieldof health care and hospital super-vision.

Among the topics to be handled

are disaster planning, the psychi-atric patient, the nursing aposto-late, psychological needs of theworker, and emergency feedingThe special session in disaster

planning will be presided over byBrother Constantine Krohn, ad-ministrator of Alexian Brothers

Hospital, .Elizabeth.

Theme of the 43rd annual meet-

ing will be “The Hospital Aposto-late in a Changing Era."

Among featured speakers willbe Rev. John J. Lynch, S.J., pro-fessor of moral theology at Wes-ton College, Massachusetts; Dr.Lillian M. Gilbreth,author of thebest seller “Cheaper by the

Dozen,” and Danny Thomas, tele-

vision comedian.

Fr. Kollar of Leonia

To Lead PilgrimageNEW YORK Rev. Anton T.

Kollar. O. Carm., of St. John the

Evangelist, Leonia. will lead a

pilgrimage to Canada during the300th anniversary celebration ofSte. Anne de Beaupre accordingto the Catholic Travel League

Father Kollar will act as spirit-ual leader on the Aug. 29 pil-grimage. The group he heads will

participate in devotions at theShrine of Brother Andre at theBasilica of St. Joseph’s. Montreal,

Our Lady of the Cap-de-la-Made-

ileine and Ste. Anne de Beaupre

To Hold SuppliersExhibit May 29-30

NEWARK Seventy firm* will display iWr ware* farSisters, priests, Brothers and other purchasing agents of Cath-olic institutions at Cooperative Supply Services' annual Sup-pliers' Exhibit. The show will be held May » and 30 at EssexCatholic High School from 10 a m. to S p.m.

Cooperative Supply Services has taken over an entire floorof the high school for the use of the exhibitors, whose productswill include everything from lawn seed and stationery to stereo-phonic sound equipment The annua) exhibit is the largest trad*show given on a state-wide basis.

Religious purchasers will be served a buffet luncheon onboth days. Over $3,000 in registration prues will be awarded.

Purpose of the show is to provide purchasers with an op-portunity to see demonstrations of new product* without takingtime to interview individual salesmen

Early DeadlineBecause of the Memorial Day

holiday, the May 31 issue ofThe Advocate will go to press

one day early that week. Cluband parish news must be inThe Advocate office no laterthan Friday, May 23.

Publicity directors are re-

minded that Ihe deadline for

society news for all other issuesis 4 p.m. Monday.

At Graduation

St. Peter’s to Honor

Judge, EducatorJERSEY CITY A judge and *an educator will re-

ceive the honorary doctor of laws degree June 8 at th®

67th commencement of St. Peter's College, it was an-

nounced this week by Very Rev. James J. Shanahan, S.J.,president.

They are Thomas F. Meaney,of Jersey City, judge of the

U. S. District Court for the Dis-

trict of New Jersey, and MjchaelJ. Delehanty of New York

founder and director of the Dele-

hanty Institute.

Previously, Father Shanahan

had announced that the honorarydegree will also be conferred

upon Auxiliary Bishop Walter W.

Curtis.

JUDGE MEANEY was born in

Jfersey City, and was educated at

St. Joseph’s School, Jersey CityHigh School, St. Peter’s College,and Fordham University School

of Law, class of 1911.

Judge Meaney served over-

seas in World War I as a first

lieutenant. He was Judge of

the Hudson County Juvenile

and Domestic Relations Court

from 1923-34, and Judge of theHudson County Court of Com-

mon Pleas 1934-1939.

He was appointed Judge of the

U. S. District Court by PresidentRoosevelt May 5, 1942.

MICHAEL DELEHANTY es-

tablished the Delehanty Institute

in 1915 and since then the insti-

tute has trained 500,000 students,most of them for civil serviceexaminations. About 90% of the

men on the New York City Po-

lice and Fire Departments have

studied there. Alumni include a

former New York mayor, numer-

ous judges and government offi-cials.

The Institute branched out

into technical fields during and

after World War II and now

there is a separate division for

automotive mechanics and

classes in radio and TV serv-

ice and repair.After the War, Delehanty estab-

lished Delehanty High School in

Jamaica, a private high school

serving Queens. The institution

is fully accredited and has an

enrollment of 800 plus several

hundred evening students.

Archbishop’s AppointmentsSUNDAY, MAY 25

10 a.m., Solemn Pontifical Mass, Sacred Heart Cathedral,Newark.

12:15 p.m., Preside, Solemn Mass of Thanksgiving, SilverJubilee of Ordination of Rev. Joseph L. Donnelly, St. Mary’sChurch, Jersey City.

2 p.m., Confirmation, Holy Family, Nutley.2 p.m., Confirmation,St Peter’s Church, Newark.2:30 p.m., Confirmation, Sacred Heart Cathedral, Newark.4 p.m., Confirmation, St. Peter’s Chapel, Newark.4 p.m., Confirmation, St. Francis Xavier, Newark.4 p.m., Confirmation, Mt. Virgin, Garfield.

MONDAY, MAY 262 p.m., Confirmation, St. Andrew’s, Bayonne.7:00 p.m., Annual dinner of the Catholic Forum, Military

Park Hotel, Newark.

TUESDAY, MAY 274 p.m., Confirmation, Our Lady of Grace, Hoboken.7:30 p.m., Confirmation, St. Joseph's, Hoboken.

WEDNESDAY, MAY 283 p.m., Address Deacon Class at Immaculate Conception

Seminary, Darlington.7 p.m., Guest Speaker, Silver Jubilee dinner for Catholic

Choir Guild, Essex House, Newark.

THURSDAY, MAY 292 p.m., Confirmation, St. Anne’s (Boulevard), Jersey City.4 p.m., Confirmation, Sacred Heart, Jersey City.

FRIDAY, MAY 3010:30 a.m., Blessing and laying of cornerstone of new

Church of the Immaculate Conception, Elisabeth, and presidingat the Solemn Mass of Thanksgiving at 11 a.m., commemorat-ing the Silver Jubilee of Ordination of Rev. Thomas J. Don-nelly.

2 p.m., Confirmation, Annunciation, Paramus.2 p.m., Confirmation, All Saints, Jersey City.

SATURDAY, MAY 31 '9 a.m., Ordinations, Sacred Heart Cathedral, Newark.9 a.m., Ordinations, Immaculate Conception Seminary, Dar*

lington.2 p.m., Confirmation, St. John’s, Hillside.2 p.m., Confirmation, Our Lady of Mt. Carmel, Newark.4 p.m., Confirmation, St. Vincent’s, Bayonne.4 p.m., Confirmation, St. Teresa’s, Summit.

SUNDAY, JUNE 12 p.m., Confirmation, St. Ann's, Hoboken.2 p.m., Confirmation, St. Anthony’s, Elizabeth.2 p.m., Confirmation, St. Stanislaus, Garfield.4 p.m., Confirmation, St. Francis, Ridgefield Park.4 p.m., Confirmation, Holy Rosary, Elizabeth.8 p.m., Blessing and laying of cornerstone of school and

parish center of Immaculate Heart of Mary Church, Mahwah.

20 THE ADVOCATE May 24, 1958

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