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PAGE 2-B—THE BULLETIN, August 9. 1958
HANGER CAB COMPANY
PROMPT AND COURTEOUS SERVICE
1003 Virginia Ave. PO. 1-3171
Hapeville, Ga.
Compliments Of
A FRIEND
OLIN GRANT CLEANERS
Every Garment Receives Our Personal Attention,
Assuring Perfect Service At All Times,
208 So. Main St. PO. 1-2146
East Point, Ga.
Lon Bridges & Son Service Station
TIRE & BATTERY
It's Our Extra Service That Counts
Serving the North Side for 32 Years
3227 Peachtree Rd. at Maple Dr. CE. 3-1173
Atlanta, Ga.
READ THE . . .
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World
Published Every Morning Except Monday
“News While It Is News"
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JAckson 1-1459
W. A. SCOTT, II, Founder and Publisher (1928-34)
C. A. SCOTT, Editor and General Manager
BEST WISHES
FROM
T. V. WILLIAMS
HOWARD L. CARMICHAEL
& SONS
FUNERAL DIRECTORS
PO. 1-1138 600 SOUTH EAST POINT
EAST POINT, GA.
ARTISTIC BEAUTY INSTITUTE
Trainers and Suppliers of
Better Hair Dressers
MU. 8-2900 SV2 AUBURN AVE.
ATLANTA, GA.
INTERNATIONAL UNION
OF ELEVATOR
CONSTRUCTORS LOCAL No. 32
J. B. McLAUGHLIN, President
A. R. CAMPBELL, Vice-President
R. J. BUTLER, Business Representative
250 10TH ST., N. E. TR. 2-5396
ATLANTA, GA.
CLAIRMONT & PEACHTREE
ROAD PHARMACY
Quality Drugs
Prescriptions and Sundries
Clairmont Road in Chamblee
DRS. FRANK AND THOMAS WATKINS
4004 Clairmont Rd.
CATHOLIC MUST PUT "FIRST THINGS FIRST."
Why A Catholic Hospital?
(By a Priest Patient)
The advantages accruing to a
Catholic by being in a Catholic
hospital during illness are pri
marily, though not exclusively,
spiritual. In a Catholic Hos
pital the patient enjoys privileg
es few or none of which could
be his in a non-Catholic Hos
pital.
The patient who is able to
be up and about may attend
Holy Mass daily and Holy Com
munion is brought daily to all
patients desiring it. The Blessed
Sacrament is reserved in the
the chapel and one is free to
pay a visit to the Master of the
House and spend some time in
prayer; or one may make the
Stations of the Cross, if he feels
so inclined. The Chaplain visits
his Catholic patients once or
twice a day, thus providing am
ple opportunity for sacramental
confession and spiritual guid
ance. Hospital personnel are in
structed to inform the Priest
when a patient’s condition war
rants so that the Sacrament of
Extreme Unction may be ad
ministered. Then, too, the daily
visits of the Sisters, whose gen
tle words and kind smiles cheer
and comfort the sick. The ex
ample of their dedicated lives
strengthens and vivifies one’s
faith and makes one proud of
belonging to the Church which
inspires such unselfish voca
tions
The ordinary layman knows
little of the problems of the
moral theologian. He can. how
ever, as a patient in a Catholic
hospital rest with a quiet con
science and perfect peace of
mind, knowing that all the re
quirements of Catholic theology,
as regards medical ethics, will
be complied with in every de
partment.
In a word, the whole atmo
sphere of the hospital is Catho
lic and a stimulus to one’s faith.
How often has not a stay in a
Catholic hospital been the in
strument of God’s grace — the
means He has used to restore
lax Catholics to fervor and fre-
quentation of the Sacraments;
and fallen-away Catholics to the
practice of their religion.
At the present time, Catholic
hospitals usually equal and
more often surpass other hos
pitals, as far as medical profes
sion and competence, comfort,
and modern conveniences are
concerned. The large number of
Jews, Protestants, and those of
no religious affiliations whatso
ever, who patronize Catholic
hospitals, is ample evidence of
this.
There are many excellent hos
pitals, as far as medical care
goes, but the Catholic layman is
bound by a higher stand of val
ues. He must put first things
first. He must put God and the
welfare of his soul first. They
are at all times more important
than the body. The glorification
of God, through the salvation of
one’s immortal soul is man’s
prime duty in life. To succeed
in this is to have made a success
out of life, no matter how hum
ble the position he may occupy
in the eyes of the world. To
have failed in this is to have
made a mess out of life no mat
ter how loudly the world may
acclaim him. Why take any
chances in the critical hour of
physical illness. All of his ef
forts at this time should be di
rected toward God’s honor and
glory and his soul’s eternal wel
fare. This is especially true in
the time of serious illness.
Thomas A. Kempis once com
plained “Few are improved by
illness.” How much greater rea
son would he not have to say
the same today of those placed
in the neo-pagan atmosphere of
most public hospitals. Yet, this
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Atlanta, Ga.
Brook wood Service Station
TR. 6-2171
1320 Peachtree Rd., N. W.
Atlanta, Ga.
CREDIT BUREAU OF ATLANTA
JA. 2-C331
225 Walton Bldg.
Atlanta, Ga,
Handi - Panties
by
ALEXIS, Inc
Manufacturers of fine
infant's wear
199 Marietta Street, N. W.
JA. 5-3404
Atlanta, Ga.
OUR HEARTIEST BEST WISHES
TO SAINT JOSEPH'S HOSPITAL
FROM
THE UNIFORM SHOP
76 BROAD ST., N. W., AT PEACHTREE
PHONE JAckson 2-6688 ATLANTA, GA.
“FASHIONS IN UNIFORMS"
“For Women In White"
Davison^
Of»OiXlE
See scintillating new settings
on Davison's glorified Fifth Floor . . .
JEWELS FOR YOUR HOME
Come touring through The Charm Home, The Cot
tage and Forward House now open on Davison's
Fifth Floor. Gather jewel-bright decorating ideas
for your own house beautiful.
Modern Management Methods Add To
Catholic Institutions' Efficiency
(Photograph by Derickson Studio)
Divine. Patiently born, it should
contribute both to the work of
our purification and our sancti
fication.
What better way is there of
assuring that this shall be true
. , . . , . , with regard to ourselves and our
statement need not, indeed . ,, , . . ,, ...
dear ones than by insisting that
should not be true. In God’s our doctor take us to the whole-
plan sickness is but a stepping some atmosphere of a Catholic
stone toward intimacy with the hospital.
(N.C.W.C. News Service)
CINCINNATI—Modern man
agement methods not only make
Catholic institutions more ef
ficient but also help them car
ry out their apostolate, it was
emphasized here.
Father John J. Flanagan, S.J.,
executive director of the Catho
lic Hospital Association, made
the point in an address at Xa
vier University.
“The good old way of doing
things,” he said, “often was the
good old way of throwing mon
ey out the window.”
He addressed Xavier’s sixth
Conference on Business Prob
lems of Catholic Institutions
which drew more than 100 of
ficials of Catholic hospitals and
other institutions in a score of
states and Canada.
Father Flanagan offered his
audience a “philosophy of ad
ministration” including the fol
lowing suggestions:
1. Keep and open mind and
seek the best possible methods
that will help carry out the ob
jectives of the institutions as
well as the motivation of the
religious community that runs
it.
2. Recognize that management
is a distinct art — or science.
3. Develop the “management
team” concept, realizing that
management skills are not the
exclusive possession of the top
executive officer.
4. Key people in the institu
tion must have the desire to im
prove their management tech
niques.
5. Higher superiors of admin
istrators must be sympathetic
with the administrations’ ef
forts to improve management
methods.
Summing up, Father Flana
gan declared: “Good administra
tion can be part of our aposto
late. Good management helps us
to discharge obligations to those
we serve, to our religious con
gregations, and to the Church.
It leads not only to better re
ligious institutions, but also to
better Religious.”
The speaker called attention
to the current attitude among
business and industrial leaders
toward management.
“Today, management is stu
dying itself intently — studying
its structure, analyzing the func
tions of supervisors, attempting
to work out methods of devel
oping administrative and super
visory personnel so that they
will be able to assume more re
sponsibility, be able to exercise
more leadership, have more ini
tiative and, learning to work
with people, be instrumental in
increasing production . . .”
“The time has come” Father
Flanagan said, “for us to stand
back, look at our institutions,,
our services, the need of our
patients — and try to evolve a
pattern of organization which
will fit best the needs of the
patients, and which will inte
grate personnnel and facilities
into a harmonious whole.”
FIRST THINGS FIRST
A man must wake up and find
himself before he can expect to
wake up and find himself fam
ous.
SUCH IS LIFE
Take things as they come—
the past is gone, tomorrow is an
uncertainty, and today is no sure
thing.
FULL TIME JOB
Half the world spends a life
time trying to live up to a repu
tation ■— and the other half try
ing to live one down.
CHAMBLEE CHAPEL
Mrs. Geo. W. Marchman, Licensed Catholic Funeral Directress
George W. Marchman, Jr., Catholic Funeral Director
GL. 7-3101 North Peachtree Rd.
Chamblee, Ga.
MOORE’S ICE CREAM
"GUARDED QUALITY"
WA. 2-4968 54 Alabama St., S. W.
Atlanta, Ga.
HENRI’S BAKERY
FAMOUS FOR DELICIOUS & WHOLESOME
BREAD AND CAKES
CE. 7-0202 3251 Peachtree Rd., N. E.
Atlanta, Ga.
JONES
REFRIGERATION CO.
PROMPT, EFFICIENT & GUARANTEED SERVICE
TR. 4-5749
1349 Northside Drive, N. W.
Atlanta, Ga.
Denney’s Barber
And Beauty Shop
SERVING DECATUR AND GLENWOOD
509-511 DERRILL DR.
BU. 9-0535
DECATUR, GA.
Insured Savings
Home Loans
WEST END FEDERAL
SAVINGS & LOAN
ASSOCIATION
C. A. Bowers, Executive Vice President
946 GORDON STREET, S. W. PL. 3-6101
ATLANTA 10, GEORGIA