Bulletin (Monroe, Ga.) 1958-1962, June 28, 1958, Image 5

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THE BULLETIN, June 23. 1958—PAGE 5 REX EMPLOYMENT Superior Domestic Help— References Thoroughly Checked. MU. 8-8875 208 Auburn Ave, ATLANTA, GA. COX SINCLAIR SERVICE STATION 11th and 4ih Ave. Columbus, Ga. JOHN MARSHALL LAW SCHOOL 115 Forrest Ave., N. E. JA. 3 8550 Day And Evening Classes FOREST PARK BEAUTY SHOP PO. 7-4222 1254 Main Street Forest Park, Ga. THE DINETTE GOOD FOOD Across From St. Joseph's Infirmary JA. 3-9207 246 IVY ST., N. E. ATLANTA, GA. Warner Robins Scouts Honored WARNER ROBINS — Cub Scout Pack 122, sponsored by the Sacred Heart Council of the Knights of Columbus (No. 4371), Warner Robins, was recently cited as the best and most active in the Peachbelt District, Cen tral Georgia Council — Boy Scouts of America, by District Commissioner, Mr. Bill Cox dur ing the presentation of the 1958 Charter to Pack 122. Although sponsored by a Catholic organi zation, Pack 122 has opened its doors to all boys who were in terested in Scouting. Several faiths are represented, approx imately one-third coming from Protestant families. Participation by all parents in teaching the boys new skills, teamwork, and respect for the individual rights of others, a common and universal goal, is attributed to the success of Pack 122. K of C Council 4371 also spon sors Boy Scout Troop 122 which recently honored two of its Boy Scouts with the Eagle Scout Award. Savannah Services For Mrs. McDermott SAVANNAH — Funeral serv ices for Mrs. Agnes H. McDer mott were held June 11th at the Blessed Sacrament Church. Survivors are her husband, Frank McDermott Jr.; a sister, Mrs. Kate Fogarty of Savannah; tw'o grandchildren, two great grandchildren and a number of nieces and nephews. SERVICES FOR MRS. GROGAN SAVANNAH — Funeral serv ices for Mrs. Nellie Mae Grogan were held June 10th at the Ca thedral of St. John the Baptist. Survivors are her husband, John F. Grogan. ALDO’S Italian Restaurant St Drive-In 1501 CAMPRELLTON ROAD • Atlanta's Newest and Finest Italian Restaurant 11:30 A. M. — 12:00 P. M. Complete Italian and American Dinners PIZZA — SPAGHETTI CHARCOAL BROILED STEAKS Take-Out Service CE. 3-3305 T/ortl, side "J)Ju a teAAen Atlanta's Gourmet Shop CATERING 3209 Maple Drive Atlanta, Ga. St. Joseph’s Infirmary Ip School of Nursing . ATLANTA, GEORGIA Conducted by the founded 1900 RELIGIOUS SISTERS OF MERCY OF THE UNION Apply: Director School of Nursing Tel. No. JA. 5-4681 FOR THAT SPECIAL OCCASION ... RENT FORMAL WEAR from O’Kelley’s, Inc. Rent your entire Formal Wear wardrobe. O'Kelley'* features a complete line of handsome Men's and Boy'i Formal alfire. Also Bridal Gowns, Veils, Bridesmaids dresses and Hoops. Cocktail dresses and Formals for all other ocasions. O’JQhy \ Jnc. 219 Mitchell St., SW. JA. 2-9960 lew System Of Teaching By Tape Recording Expands To Include Eight Schools BOOK REVIEWS EDITED BY EILEEN HALL 3087 Old Jonesboro Road, Hapeville, Georgia (N.C.W.C. News Service) NEW YORK — A new system of simultaneous, yet individual ized, teaching by tape record ings, which was begun experi mentally about four years ago, now embraces ten classrooms in eight Catholic schools. About 500 students in the four-state network are taking regular instruction by the meth od which was started at a school in Covington, La., by a com munity of Benedictine Sisters. Thus far, visible results from the radically new technique have included: reduction in the amount of time a teacher must devote to routine tasks; intens ive stimulation of the pupil’s thinking processes, and closer attention to the individual stu dent by the teacher, even in large classes. Information on the new sys tem was disclosed here in a 24- page pamphlet describing the method and tracing its develop ment. Entitled “Education’s Sil ent Symphony,” the pamphlet was written by Clifford J.. Laube, editor and textbook con tributor. It was published by Chas. B. Coates and Company, Incorporated, 292 Madison Ave., New York 17, N. Y. With release of the descriptive booklet, Mother Alfred Schroll, president of Mount St. Scholas- tica College, Atchison, Kan., an nounced that a grant-in-aid of $40,000 from the Fund for the Advancement of Education will make it possible to carry on further development of the sys tem. Although the technique was inaugurated at St. Scholastica Academy, Covington, La., its Question Box (Continued From Page Four) (The number and the kind of Masses desired should be clear ly defined.) One should also set aside a certain amount for funer al expenses, unless the matter has already been taken care of by other means. CHARITY TO OTHERS be gins at home, with the deserving members of one’s family. A fa ther, of course, is morally bound to provide for wife and children who need assistance for reason able maintenance, according to their station in life. In addition to one’s immediate family, one should then remember, accord ing to his wishes, deserving rel atives and friends. No Christian will could pos sibly be complete without be quests to the Church and chari ty. No follower of Christ could possibly hope to justify a will devoid of reference to Christ’s Church, or to the members of His Mystical Body, particularly the poor. THE FOLLOWING could be considered, then: one’s own par ish church and diocese; semi naries for the priesthood; mis sionaries and missionary organi zations (e.g., the Society for the Propagation of the Faith); in stitutions of mercy, such as hos pitals, orphanages, asylums for the mentally ill, homes for the aged; associations of mercy, like the Diocesan Bureau of So cial Service, the various St. Vincent de Paul Societies; re ligious houses, monasteries and convents; institutions of re search and learning; projects of a humanitarian nature, like the Cancer Fund; civic projects for public improvement or reform, like the Community Chest, etc. ANY ORGANIZATION men tioned in a will should be cited according to its full, official, le gal title. (It goes without saying, of course, that substantial bequests made in behalf of pet animals, or absurd enterprises, are un worthy of a Christian.) HAVING DRAFTED one’s will in the rough, one should consult a lawyer, or a person specially trained in such mat ters. Otherwise the will may possibly be . invalid according to civil law. The small fee a lawyer receives for drawing up a will is insignificant when weighed against the advantages. As regards an executor, fin ally, one should select someone who is both trustworthy and conscientious, that all the stipu lations of a will may be carried out exactly as intended. ONCE MADE a will can be changed any time. The import ant thing is to make one, for no two facts are more certain than that of death, and the uncertain ty as to -when it will come. growth has shown the need for a coordinating center. St. Scho lastica College, Atchison, has been selected as the place where reports on results from the eight schools will be studied. In essence, the system is based on a classroom that is wired for sound. The pupils’ desks have jacks for headsets and the teacher sits at a console which plays recordings from playback units. Lessons on the tapes are grad ed to three levels of learning, and the teacher may direct any lesson to a particular pupil or group of pupils. Variations from this basic sys tem include allowing the teach er to give personal attention, via the pupil’s “private line,” to one of her children who needs extra help. This can be done without interrupting the others. Also, the teacher may take a section of the class and work with them without tape record ings, while the remainder of the class is uninterrupted. The new system is aimed at the twin problems of a shortage of teachers and crowded class rooms. The method is said to offer a multiplication of the teacher’s powers that will per mit her to focus upon the in dividual student, regardless of class size. According to Mr. Laube’s booklet, the schools having tape classrooms include: St. Scholas tica Academy, Covington, fifth through eighth grades on tape; Mater Dolorosa School, New Or leans, second grade, and remedi al teaching on tape; Cathedral School, Lafayette, La., eighth grade. Also, De La Salle Normal School and Junior Novitiate of the Christian Brothers, Lafay ette, La., social sciences and chemistry; Our Lady of Fatima School, Lafayette, sixth grade; Immaculate Conception School, Grand Prairie, Texas, fourth grade and reading clinic; In carnate Word School, San An tonio, first grade; St. Joseph Cathedral School, St. Joseph, Mo., third and sixth grades. Theology for The Layman (Continued From Page Four) never to find an object-worthy of it? We might say that God loves Himself; but, whatever light this might bring to the great theologian, there would be something a little depressing in it for the average Christian: the notion of God, solitary in eter nity, loving Himself with all His might would not stimulate our own spiritual lives much. And indeed mankind has al most invariably found some thing frightening in the solitary God; it was to escape from that fear that the pagans invented their many gods. A God with companions of his own sort was not so frightening. Their desire to find compan ionship for God was a true in sight; their solution was wrong. It was left to Christ our Lord to reveal to us that there is companionship within the one divine Nature — not a number of Gods, but three Persons with in the one God. It is in the knowledge and love of the three Persons that the divine life is lived. And Christ our Lord wants to admit us to the know ledge of it. As we read the Gospels, we find Our Lord saying something new about God — there are hints and foreshadowings of it the Old Testament, but certain ly no statement. Alongside His insistence that God is one, there is a continuel referrence to some sort of plurality. There is no watering-down, of course, of the strictest monotheism — Our Lord quotes from the Old Test ament “Hear, O Israel, the Lord thy God is one God.” But there is a new element of more-than- oneness, which still leaves the oneness utterly perfect. Matthew (xi. 27) and Luke (x. 22) give us one phrase: “No one knoweth the Son but the Father; and no one knoweth the Father but the Son . . .”: here are two persons put on one same, level. “I and the Father are one” (John x 30): they are two per sons, yet one. At the very end of St. Mat thew’s Gospel, a third is brought in, still within the oneness — “Baptising them in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit” — three per- Each issue of ihis Book Page is confided fo the patronage of Mary, Mediatrix of All Graces, with the hope that every read er and every contributor may be specially favored by her and her Divine Son. AUTOBIOGRAPHY OF ST. THERESE OF LISIEUX, trans lated by Ronald Knox (Kenedy, $4.50). During the month of June, 1897, a young French Carmelite nun “spent long afternoons un der the chestnut trees where her invalid chair had been wheel ed,” laboriously writing the fin al pages of a manuscript which was to become a spiritual class ic, millions of copies, in various languages, being circulated throughout the world before many years had passed. The portion of the manuscript which Sister Therese of the Child Jesus finished three months before her death was the third of three separate ac counts, all written under obedi ence, which were assembled and published as The Siory of a Soul just a year later. Therese’s autobiography, as first publish ed, was drastically edited by her sister, Mother Agnes of Jesus, by Therese’s own authority. “Anything you want to cut or add to the notebook of my life, it is as though I were myself cutting or adding,” she had told Mother Agnes. There were ex cellent reasons why this was done at the time of its first pub lication. Later, however, after the young author had been canon ized and her teaching, as set forth in the autobiography, had been proposed by four Popes to the faithful for their imitation, it became vitally important that the unedited manuscript should be made available. How this was done, as well as other in teresting details concerning the writing of the story, is told in the introduction to this edition, by Father Francois de Sainte Marie, O.C.D., who prepared the facsimile edition of St. The rese’s manuscript for publica tion. That French edition was , translated into English by Mon signor Knox, who completed the work only six weeks before his death last August. The present edition is the result. It will be welcomed by St. Therese’s many friends, and is likely also to win new friends for her. The three portions of her manuscript have been returned to their original form and chronological order (the second and' third had been reversed in previous edi tions); omitted parts, comprising about a quarter of the whole, dealing principally with inti mate details of the saint’s family life, have been restored; all changes made by Mother Agnes and other editors have been eliminated; and the beloved young Carmelite’s own thought is presented exactly. Nine pho tographs illustrate the book. THE MEDDLESOME FRIAR AND THE WAYWARD POPE, by Michael de la Bedoyere (Doubleday, $4.00). (Reviewed by Elizabeth Hester) Suppose this: You are pre sented with a priest who is in the habit of running about de manding that they look to their sins (rather like some modern evangelists), forecasting dire re sults if repentance is not forth coming, and then calling on God with such remarks as “If I lie, You lie too”; this man also uses as part of his reform system an army of children all under in struction to run and tattle to sons,- but with one name, one na ture therefore since God names things for what they are. This combination of one and more-than-one is most fully ev ident in the four chapters — fourteen to seventeen — in which St. John tells of the Last Supper. (Everyone who is tak ing this course seriously should read those chapters again and again; there is no exhausting their richness.) What is especial ly to be noticed is a kind of “in terchangeableness.” Thus when Philip the Apos tle says (John xiv. 8) “Let us see the Father.” Our Lord an swered: “'Whoever has seen me has seen the Father.” Similarly Our Lord says that He will answer our prayer (John xiv. 14) and that His Fa ther will (John xiv. 23); that He will send the Holy Ghost (John xvi. 7) and that His Father will (John xiv. 16). In the doctrine of the Blessed Trinity all these phrases fall miraculously into place. him the intimate details of their parents’ lives. Grant to this man no sins of the flesh. Secondly, you are given a man who has four acknowledged illegitimate children, who is corpulent to a degree suggesting habitual glut tony, and who is also the Roman Pontiff. Though he is not phys ically ascetic, grant this man great personal kindliness, rea sonableness, pious humility, and give him credit for being an able administrator. And ask yourself: Which is the greater sinner? Understandably, the Church has canonized neither, although for many years there has been much agitation among certain Dominicans for beatification of the former. He was Savonarola, a Friar who lived in Florence, Italy in the last years of the fifteenth century, and who was hanged for his efforts to unseat Alexander VI, the second man described above. But though no efforts have been made for the beatification of Alexander VI, there are many who think his sins were less serious than Sa vonarola’s. Alexander, they say, was guilty neither of pride nor presumption . . . but Savona rola was. Michael de la Bedoyere’s book is beautifully written and is a particularly outstanding bid to give fair credit to each of his so desperate characters. How ever, the result is curiously sketched. Nothing so complex, it seems, can be done justice in 252 pages. HOLY HOUR BOOKLETS “I have a great desire to be loved by men in the Sacrament of My love,” Jesus complained lovingly to St. Margaret Mary. “Behold this Heart which has so loved men that it has spared no thing, even to the exhausting of itself for them, and yet from the greater number I receive only indifference and contempt.” To satisfy His great desire, He ask ed for Holy Hours of reparation. “Of all devotions,” said St. Alphonsus Liguori, “that of adoring Jesus in the Blessed Sacrament is the most import ant, inasmuch as, after the ac tual reception of the sacraments, it is the most acceptable to God and the most advantageous to ourselves.” In his letter on the Sacred Lit urgy, Pope Pius XII recom mended the practice of the Holy Hour. “This practice of adora tion,” he said, “is based on strong and solid reasons. For the Eucharist is at once a sacrifice and a sacrament; but it differs from the other sacraments in this, that it not only produces grace, but contains in a perma nent manner the Author of grace Himself.” Many religious societies and associates have been formed for the perpetual adoration of Our Lord in the Blessed Sacrament. Perhaps the best known of them is the Society of .the Fathers of the Most Blessed Sacrament, founded in 1856 by Blessed Pet er Julian Eymard, who also or ganized the People’s Eucharistic League for lay people. The Fa thers of the Blessed Sacrament make use of the apastolate of the press to carry on the Eu charistic apostolate in this coun try. Among the many excellent publications from their press (The Sentinel Press, 194 East 76th Street, New York 21, N. Y.) are a series of Holy Hour book lets, including the following: HOLY HOUR GUIDE, by Rev. Lionel Vashon, S.S.S., 15c, ex plaining what to do during the Holy Hour; methods of prayer, particularly Blessed Eymard’s own “Method of the Four Ends of Sacrifice”; how to meditate; how to deal with distractions, etc. OUR CLASS VISITS JESUS, written especially for children by Father Vashon, 10c. Seven 10-cent pamphlets “For Your Holy Hour,” entitled: Faith; Fraternal Charity; By the Side of a Grave; Watch and Pray; Institution of the Holy Eucharist; Our Lady of the Most Blessed Sacrament; The Eucharistic Heart. A series of leaflets, at 85c per 100, with such titles as “When You Miss One Holy Commun ion,” “Feed Your Soul Regu larly,” “What Riches in a Single Communion,” “Why Not Hear Mass Every Day?” Quantity prices are available on all of these. Some people are so busy fish ing for compliments that they never land a single bit of suc cess. Maternity Fashions 224 Peachtree St., N. W, JA. 4-0468 OPEN FRIDAY NIGHTS CHARGE • LAYAWAYS f T0UH gii.tr**" 1 l h^jgfjk&M i BELL INSURANCE AGENCY Insurance Agents and Consultants Barnest Bell - Horace Edmond 269 Ml. Vernon Rd., Box 178 Sandy Springs, Ga. BL. 5-2250 CONE STREET GARAGE Roy Livingston Co. 98 Cone, N. W„ Atlanta ft m $*■ ^ jBk Available At 18 LOCATIONS Parking Spaces Always ^fij? O’NEIL’S BOWLEffAMA V HAPEVILLE JEWELRY COMPANY 583-B S. Central Ave. HAPEVILLE, GA. NORTHEAST PLAZA SHOPPING CENTER © 24 Automatic Lanes • Air Conditioned ME. 6-5211, Buford Hwy. 24-Hr. Service - Passengers Insured Blue Top & Veterans Cab Company TWO PHONES: 47-3146 — 47-3191 Brookhaven Chamblee Doraville dale's CELLAR RESTAURANT PEACHTREE AND IVY STREETS CHARCOAL BROILED STEAK CHICKEN — SEAFOOD Hours: II a. m.-ll p. m.. Luncheon through Dinner VISIT BEAUTIFUL DALE'S COFFEE HOUSE Lobby Imperial Hotel 6 a. m.-lO p. m. •Jr CtNTlR Of DOWNTOWN ATLANTA b'sco'i!'!;! mfah in the L-.uiliuf Miami linHVt,.. your favorite i-cveM#? in tin: til:m Mailt Porui.it; Lmmgc. Tdcvision AvatlibW lor h: rooms, ; RoT«! from J>.06 Sins**, $7.50 Double. Cjttmnitcuv U<Jd« of Ctt»* COMPLETELY AIR - CONDITIONED hurry £>;*««***, Y'ALL CALL 3093 PEACHTREE ROAD, ATLANTA, GA. Phones: CE. 3-1133, 4, 5- 6 ALVIN ROY’S SLENDERIZING SALON "Physical Fitness Is Our Specialty" Opposite Atlanta Journal JA. 4-4531 5 FORSYTH ST., N. W. ATLANTA, GA. VM.S0N APPLIANCE CO. ELECTRICAL and GAS APPLIANCES RADIO and TELEVISION AUTHORIZED GENERAL-ELECTRIC DEALER 3051 Peachtree Rd., N. E. — Phone CE. 3-1196 — Atlanta, Ga. Charles F. Templeman, Manager