Jersey Hiradó, 1964 (45. évfolyam, 3-39. szám)

1964-07-31 / 31. szám

July 31, 1964 BUSINESS AND PROFESSIONAL GUIDE BARBERO BAKERY, INC. WHOLESALE & RETAIL The Finest Baked Goods for Over 35 Years BREAD, ROLLS WEDDING, BIRTHDAY & SPECIAL OCCASION CAKES AND COOKIES 61 Conrad St., Cor. Anderson - Tel. 396-9704 - Ample Parking BARTOLINI LIQUOR STORE “Where You Get Your Money’s Worth” Cor. Chambers St. & Morris Ave. Phone: EXport 3-7951 Columbus Realty & Mortgage Co. REAL ESTATE AND INSURANCE RAY BONANNI, Realtor 524^ HAMILTON AVENUE EXport 6-8157 Italian-American Sportsmen's Club Banquets, Dinners, Weddings — Public Dining Room For Reservations Call . . • 585-8588 BENIGNO (Billy) ROSSI, Mgr. Kuser Road, Trenton 90, N. J. BERNARD W. LEAMMARI, Inc. REAL ESTATE — INSURANCE — MORTGAGES 900 SOUTH CLINTON AVENUE EXport 3-4252 PINTINALLI REALTY CO. REAL ESTATE AND INSURANCE 953 PRINCETON AVE., TRENTON, N. J. OWen 5-8501 TRENTON WINE COMPANY "FIOR Dl CALIFORNIA" 171 WASHINGTON STREET Phone: OWen 5-6463 Sanhican Savings & Loan Assn. Mortgage Loans — Construction Loans Account Loans — Home Improvement Loans 900 S. Clinton Ave., Trenton, N. J. EX 3-4254 MISSIONARY — FORMER TRENTONIAN Working in Midwest — Sorely Needs Your Help MUST BUY NEW BUS TO TRANSPORT CATHOLIC CHILDREN TO SCHOOL BOURBON, MO. — Population 800 - 1% Catholic 40 children enrolled in Catholic School YOU CAN HELP US GET THE NEW BUS BY Sending ALL TRADE STAMPS To: Father John B. DeAngelis Box 38, Bourbon, Mo. Father DeAngelis attended grade school at Immaculate Concep­tion and St. Joachim’s in Trenton; Seton Hall University and Darlington Seminary. • : .25. v 5 I-' : ' V- > CURRENT ANNUAL DIVIDEND COMPOUNDED SEMI ANNUALLY En Route to Castelgandolfo, Pope Visits Ancient Rome Area ROME (NC) — Pope Paul VI, on his way to his Sum-+ mer residence at Castelgandolfo July 15, stopped off in the ancient Trastevere district of Rome to inaugurate one of the city’s most colorful annual events, the celebration of the Feast of Our Lady of Mount Carmel. Trastevere— i ■ j it it ii m • i _ ml merany, across tne noer t from ancient imperial Rome —is a maze of twisting streets whose inhabitants are proud to claim they are the old­est of Romans, a fact to which .’the Pope paid tribute. The district also boasts the first church in Rome to be dedi­cated to Our Lady, St. Mary in Trastevere, and it wae here the Pope prayed for his flock of Trasteverirti. Pope Paul was scheduled to arrive at the church at 6 p.m. By 4, the square outside was teem­ing with local residents and other Romans from across the river. First in line at the locked gates waiting to enter the church were three Americans from New York, Sisters of the Holy Family of Nazareth in Rome on jubilee holi­day. Before arriving at St. Mary’s, the Papal caravan stopped at the small Church of St. Agatha. Ob­viously old and externally not much tp look a.t, the church was decked out in colored banners and draperies. A red carpet ex­tended from the street, through the doors and all the way to the main altar. As the Pope approached the church, the crowd of thousands lining the Papal route surged forward clapping hands and shout­ing. Preceded and followed by several polished limousines, the Pope’s car sped down the street and stopped so suddenly in front of the church that the Pope, standing in the back with his hands raised in a characteristic greeting gesture, had to grab for support. Pope Paul turned from side to side to acknowledge the cheers all around him and then looked up to windows bulging with spectators. Greeted at the door by a child who presented him with a bou­quet of white gladiolas and by Archbishop Enrico Dante, secre­tary of the Congregation of Rites, the Pope entered the church for a brief visit to the Blessed Sac­rament and then prayed before an ornately decorated statue of Our Lady of Carmel. Leaving the church, the Pope shook hands with clerics lining the aisles, many of them garbed in the colorful white robes and bright red cross of the Trinitarian Fathers, who are in charge of the church. As Pope Paul left, the crowd, roared again. The Pope held on.vtightly to the back of the front seat. Despite the car’s speed the Pope remained, com­posed and smiling, not seeming to miss a single face in greeting as he passed the patients and staff of a nearby hospital. Arriving at San Callisto Pal­ace, which once housed the top administrative offices of the Church and now contains the offices of the Rome Vicariate, Pope Paul left the car and walked through the palace and out onto the Square of St. Mary in Tras­tevere accompanied by six car­dinals. Inside the church, the Pope told the crowds he had come to honor Mary and to get to know directly a part of his flock dear to his heart. “In Mary we honor the Mother of Christ and our mother be­cause in Jesus Christ we are all brothers and we want to render to the Madonna this our tribute of love, devotion, faithfulness, veneration and supplication, be­cause the Lord has enclosed many privileges and mysteries in Mary and linked her to the history of our salvation and to the whole Christian life regenerated in the Lord, Who has in her a mother, while all of us have in her a model and powerful intercessor,” Pope Paul said. He told his listeners that he had come to Trastevere to “hon­or the City of Rome in a place where the city is at its most characteristic and is most true to herself.” This was a reference to­­the fact that this district is famed for preserving the ancient tradi­tions of Rome and, through in­termarriage and a tightly knit society, ancient blood strains as well. After his talk, the Pope re­turned to the adjoining palace, stopping along the way to give special blessings to a group of sick and children who had brok­en through police lines. He ap­peared at a palace window over­looking the square and again blessed the crowds. Before leav­ing the square he climbed five flights of stairs in an apartment house to visit Mrs. Virginia Na­poli, wife of a pensionc*, who has been sick for many years. Giving her his blessing, the Pope also - presented her with a small statue of Our Lady of Fatima. At each floor Pope Paul stopped to bless the tenants waiting in doorways. Concluding his visit to Traste­vere the Pope was driven to Cas­telgandolfo, where he was greeted by townspeople, Church and civil officials. To them he said: “I come partly to rest but also­­to work. We are on the eve of the third session of the Council and there are veritable mountains of books, papers and things to see and prepare. Therefore We shall offer to God these days in silence, prayer and spiritual com­munion, hoping they will be fruit­ful for Us and blessed fo* you.”' Pope Declares 1965 Jubilee Year For Philippines CEBU CITY, Philippines (NC) —Archbishop Julio Rosales of Cebu City has announced that Pope Paul VI declared 1965 a jubilee year for the Catholics of the Philippines. In February, the Philippine bishops in a joint pastoral letter declared 1965 a year of thanks­giving as the nation observes the 400th anniversary of the evangeli­zation of this country. They asked the Pope for permission to make 1965 a jubilee year. Archbishop Rosales said the Pope has granted numerous indul­gences to Catholics in connection with jubilee celebrations. Meanwhile, President Diosdado Macapagal has set up a commit­tee including five cabinet minis­ters to take charge of govern­ment participation in the com­memoration. Imprisoned Viet Officers Threaten Hunger Strike SAIGON (NC)—Some former officials of President Ngo Dinh Diem’s government, now prison­ers in national security headquar­ters here, threatened to go on a hunger strike this week, accord­ing to well-informed sources. Most of them have been held since last November on suspicion, or on chargee still unproved. A letter signed by relatives of 100 prisoners held for investiga­tion was published last Friday by Tu Do (Freedom) daily, appeal­ing to Prime Minister Maj. Gen. Nguyen Khanh to liberate “our husbands, fathers and brothers.” Dated June 15, the letter said seven months imprisonment for in­vestigation was already too long. Now another month has elapsed. “Our relatives in prison are for the most part victims of lies, per­sonal grudges or baseless opin­ions,” the writers declared. It is said that several prisoners have contracted tuberculosis. , According to the Ministry of the Interior, 180 are still held for investigation at national security headquarters. Many of these are Catholics. These former officials, civilian and military, of the late Diem government have been receiving no salary during the months of detention. Many of them have young families. Their wives are selling personal belongings to keep families going. Some of the chil­dren suffer from plain hunger. Some of those detained have been released for lack of evidence but have not been reinstated in their employment. According to an official source 200 prisoners went on a hunger strike for 10 days in June on Conson Island, Anti-Poverty Bill Reaches Senate Floor WASHINGTON (NC) —The Senate Labor Committee has re­ported the Administration’s “war on poverty” bill to the Senate floor after amending it to permit par­ticipation by private, non-profit agencies in two of its key pro­grams. Under the amendment, pri­vate non-profit agencies, includ­ing church-related schools, would be authorized to participate in the measure’s work-training- and work­­study programs, envisioned as a plan to give work experience to young people aged 16 to 21 to in­crease their employability and to provide part-time employment to enable them to stay in school. The measure calls for some 200,000 young people to take part in the work-training program. Par­ticipation by church-related schools and other private agencies would be allowed so long as it did not involve youths in projects for the construction, operation or main­tenance of as much of a facility as is used for sectarian purposes. The amended Senate bill thus is close to the House version of the legislation, which is now befoie the Rules Committee. The House bill provides for participation of church-related schools and ether agencies in the work-training and work-study programs provided their projects do not involve the youths in projects on facilities to be used “solely” for sectarian pur­poses. Other major sections of the $962,500,000 bill approved by the Labor Committee July 7 iuelude a job corps for teen-agers, a work­­study program for college students and a $340,000,000 fund to sup­port community anti-poverty ac­tion programs. PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS =5S=gJI 5

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