Bulletin (Monroe, Ga.) 1958-1962, March 22, 1958, Image 3

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THE BULLETIN, March 22, 1958—PAGE 3 AY’S HEATING AND PLUMBING COMPANY STEAM AND HOT WATER HEATING AND PLUMBING INSTALLATIONS 352 FIRST STREET MACON, GEORGIA THE BANKERS HEALTH AND LIFE INSURACE CO. HOME OFFICE 1904 All Forms of Life Insurance and Hospitalization OVER 50 YEARS OF CONTINUOUS SERVICE MACON, GEORGIA 1958 Best Wishes From DEN-NAP ELECTRIC MOLD COMPANY POST OFFICE BOX 1153 Macon, Georgia, U. S. A. Telephone 3-4494 Manufactors of Molds for Recapping Tires Passenger - Truck - Airplane - Industrial Earth Moving - Tractors Bishop Hubert J. Cartwright Of Wilmington, Heart Attack Victim (N.C.W.C News Service) ' WILMINGTON, Del., — Re quiem Mass was offered in Christ Our King church here for Coadjutor Bishop Hubert J. Cartwright, 57, of Wilmington, who died (March 6) of a heart attack. Celebrant of the Mass was Archbishop John F. O’Hara, C. S.C., of Philadelphia. The ser mon was preached by Bishop Francis E. Hyland of Atlanta, Ga., a seminary classmate and life-long friend of the deceased prelate. He lauded Bishop Cartwright as “one Who loved his priest hood” and “had no other inter est in life.” “He was one who loved as a father the souls committed to SAVANNAH DIOCESAN LOURDES CENTENNIAL PILGRIMAGE Sponsored by Most Rev. Thomas J. McDonough Auxiliary Bishop of Savannah Under the Spiritual Direction of Monsignor McNamara and Father Bourke, members will depart April 22,1958 from New York via Trans World Airlines to visit Lourdes during The Year of Jubilee—proclaimed by the Holy Father to commemorate the 100th Anniversary of Our Lady's appearances to St. Bernadette. 17-day itinerary includes; Fatima .,. Rome ;.. Killarney ... Dublin... London... Paris... Madrid ... Lisbon... $1,050.40 More than 60 Pilgrimage departures January through October. You can always TRAVEL NOW—PAY LATER when you go American ExpreuI For complete information, ask your Travel Agent or American Express Travel Service 121 Peachtree Street, N.E., Atlanta 3, Georgia, Jackson 3-7821 or at Davison’s Travel Bureau PROTECT YOUR TRAVEL FUNDS WITH AMERICAN EXPRESS TRAVELERS CHEQUES—SPENDABLE EVERYWHERE Atlanta Notre Dame Library Recommends Christian Reading for Christian Living For Lenten Reading in 1958 SCRIPTURE, CHRIST, MARY The Holy Bible. Knox Edition (Sheed and Ward) or Confra ternity Edition. The Lord. Guardini Meditations on the life of Our Lord, a modern masterpiece. The Reed of God. Houselander. Marian spirituality. The Meaning of Fatima. Martindale. The best book on the message of Fatima and the difficulties the apparitions present. THE FAITH AND THE APOSTOLATE Theology and Sanity, Sheed A study of the Faith written by a layman for laymen. Theology For Beginners. Sheed Recommended to every layman. Vocation To Love. Dohen The apostolate and its spirituality. Lend Me Your Hands. Meyer The need the Church has for the apostolic layman. CATHOLIC LIFE AND INTEREST Praying While You Work. VanZellar With an eye to modern Marthas. The Restless Christian. McDonnell. Short essays for the layman on the life of his soul, present and future. Stimulating and salutary. Prayer In Practice. Guardini Thoughtful reading for the serious Catholic. The Easter Book. Weiser. Easter customs. W LIVES OF THE SAINTS AND OTHERS Crown of Glory. Harch and Walsh. For the general reader, the best life of Pius XII to date. Married Saints. Delaney Of special interest to married folks. Pageant of the Popes. Farrow. Short lives of the Popes in a continuous narrative. GENERAL—WITH AN ACCENT ON RELIGIOUS LIFE Vatican Journal. McCormack Eyewitness accounts (over a period of 33 years) of Papal prestige, by the best reporter of the century. The Land of Stones and Saints. Keyes A story of a place (Avila) and a period. Of Cell and Cloister. Moss A vivid account of the astounding contribution to civiliza tion made by Catholic asceticism as manifested by the religious orders. The book shows the author’s lack of theo logical-historical scholarship, but it is quite delightful reading and shows a fine sense of beauty and meaning. (Edwin G. Kaiser, C.PP.S. in the Critic). The Donkey Who Always Complained. Thornton A parable for moderns. Realities. Herr and Lane Significant writing from the Catholic Press. A Seal Upon My Heart. Kane, Editor Twenty Sisters tell why and how they embraced the religious life. Catch Me These Little Foxes. A Carmelite Nun Life in a contemplative order—with an accent on the Hours and their meaning. A Right to be Merry. A Poor Clare An insight into the life of another contemplative order, a book of charm and beauty combined with whimsical humor. Biographies of several founders of religious orders. The Notre Dame Library is located in the Notre Dame Book Shop at 181 Peachtree Street (above Walgreen's Drug Store) in Atlanta. Books may be borrowed rent free. his charge,” Bishop Hyland said. “He was one who had an over whelming love and sympathy for the poor, and during all the years of his priesthood he shared most generously with the poor the few material things he ever possessed in life.” Recalling that Bishop Cart wright had been a priest for 30 years, Bishop Hyland stated “I dare say that no matter to what office or dignity he may have been promoted had he been spared to the Church, Bishop Cartwright would always have remained at heart a simple, humble priest.” Bishop Cartwright, a patient in Wilmington’s St. Francis Hos pital since February 15, was stricken with a heart attack on the morning of March 5 and died after a second attack the follow ing day. He had entered the hospital suffering from pneu monia and pleurisy. Bishop Cartwright had been named Titular Bishop of Neve and Coadjutor with the right of succession to Bishop Edmond J. Fitz Maurice of Wilmington on August 22, 1956. At the time of his appoint ment he was rector of the Ca thedral of SS. Peter and Paul in Philadelphia, a post he had held since 1936. He was consecrated on Oc tober 26, 1956, in Philadelphia’s Church of the Imaculate Con ception. Archbishop O’Hara was the consecrating prelate on that occasion, while Bishop Hyland was co-consecrator. Bishop Cartwright was born in Philadelphia on August 22, 1900, the son of the late Ralph Joseph and Alice Veronica (Quinn) Cartwright. He attend ed St. Joseph’s College Prepara tory School, Philadelphia, and St. Charles Borromeo Seminary, Overbrook, Philadelphia. He made postgraduate studies in canon law at the Catholic Uni versity of America, Washington, D. C. He was ordained to the priest hood in the Cathedral of SS. Peter and Paul on June 11, 1927, by the late Auxiliary Bishop Michael J. Crane of Philadel phia. He subsequently served as pastor at Holy Family church, New Philadelphia; St. Patrick’s church, Norristown, Pa., and St. John the Baptist church, Philadelphia. He was named assistant rec tor of the Philadelphia cathedral in 1932 and rector in 1936. It was under his direction that ex tensive renovations in the build ings were carried out. In 1947 Bishop Cartwright was named a domestic prelate with the title of Right Reverend Monsignor by His Holiness Pope Pius XII. During his many years in Philadelphia he had served as a diocesan consultor, a pro- synodal examiner and secretary of the diocesan building com mittee. He was also spiritual di rector of the Philadelphia Po lice, Firemen, Park Guards and Peace Officers’ League of the Sacred Heart. While pastor of Christ Our King church, Wilmington, Bish op Cartwright inaugurated the construction of a new church building. Though the church is still incomplete, the funeral rites were held there in accordance with his wishes. Bishop Cartwright is surviv ed by two brothers, Ralph J. and Joseph V., both of Philadelphia; and three sisters, Mrs. Eleanor Curry and Mrs. Margaret Len non, also of Philadelphia, and Mrs. Abbie .Keller of Willow Grove, Pa. OPEN NOVITIATE SALISBURY, Southern Rho desia, March 11( NC)—The first novitiate of the Jesuit Fathers to be opened in southern Africa was inaugurated at nearby Chishawasba, one of the coun try’s oldest Jesuit missions. Open to candidates from Norlhern and Southern Rho desia and South Africa, the no vitiate will accept postulants ol any race or color, provided they satisfy the requirements for en trance in the Society of Jesus. Southern African postulants to the order had previously been sent to England ’for their training. The Archdiocese of Salisbury is under the spiritual care of the English province of the Society of Jesus. Archbishop Francis Markall. No train of thought is worth while unless it carries some freight.