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CURRENT
RATE
THE BULLETIN, November 29, 1958—PAGE 3
BROOKHAVEN FEDERAL
SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOCIATION
4018 Peachtree Road, Atlanta 19, Ga.
Accounts Open by Mail-CE. 7-6406
R. C. COLBERT, President
CURRENT
RATE
WITHAM’S FABRICS CENTER
Let us help decorate your home with beautiful Colorama
Fabrics, Famous Artloom Carpets, All Wool, Nylon and
Acrilan Draperies, Covers, Slip Covers, Carpets & Valances
SAMPLES SHOWN IN YOUR HOME BY APPOINTMENT
2286 Cascade Road, S. W. PL. 3-8312
Atlanta, Ga.
dale's
CELLAR RESTAURANT
PEACHTREE AND IVY STREETS
CHARCOAL BROILED STEAK
CHICKEN — SEAFOOD
Hours: 11 a. m.-ll p. m.. Luncheon through Dinner
VISIT BEAUTIFUL DALE'S COFFEE HOUSE
Lobby Imperial Hotel 6 a. m.-lU p. m.
Y'ALL CALL
225 BUCKHEAD AVE., N. E., ATLANTA, GA.
PHONE CE. 3-3113
PHONE JA. 2-6500
589 FORREST RD.. N. E.
ATLANTA 12, GA.
^BANK LOANS%
FOR EXECUTIVES, SUPERVISORS, SALARIED WORKERS, ETC.
CALL CE. 7-1573
For Complete Banking Facilities,
Serving Entire Northeast and Northwest
Area of Greater Atlanta
ASK FOR ANY LENDING OFFICER
DeKALB NATIONAL BANK of BROOKHAVEN
fcv 4024 PEACHTREE 'RD. — Member fDIC
-^S^TRUST COMPANY OF GEORGIA GROUP^^ 1 '
CINTJIt OF DOWNIOWN ATLANTA
Rvedkiit mral-» in the Wulifiil Miami Bullet,,.
>mur favorite Bavtskt#*- in tlw
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where your money consistently earns
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receive a check for the extra dollars your
•avings have earned. Open your account this -mttIH
Mutual Federal
Savings St Loan Association
JACKSON 3-8282
205 AUBURN AVENUE, N. E.
ATLANTA, GA.
Current Dividend Rate 4 Percent Per Annum
Each Account Insured Up To $10,000.00
SAVE BY MAIL
CHARLESTON
BISHOP IS
ENTHRONED
CHARLESTON, S. C. — In
enthronement rites held Novem
ber 25th in Charleston’s Cathe
dral of St. John the Baptist, the
Most Rev. Paul J. Hallman
D. D., eighth Bishop of Charles
ton was enthroned by the Most
Rev. Francis P. Beeugh D. D.,
Archbishop of Baltimore and
Metropolitan of the Baltimore
province.
The sermon was preached by
the Most Rev. John J. Russell
D. D., Bishop of Richmond and
Bishop Hallman’s immediate
predecessor in the Charleston
See.
At Annual Meeting
BISHOPS OF 0. S. ISSUE
SEGREGATION STATEMENT
Services For
Edward Lynch
SAVANNAH — Funeral serv
ices for Edward Courtney Lynch
were held November 14th at
the Cathedral of St. John the
Baptist.
Survivors are one brother,
Frank Lynch of Fulton, 111.
W. O. BRYSON
WATCH REPAIRING
18 Wall St., S. W. - MU. 8-7135
Atlanta, Ga.
BELL
INSURANCE
AGENCY
Insurance Agents
and Consultants
Barnest Bell - Horace Edmond
269 Mt. Vernon Rd., Box 178
Sandy Springs, Ga.
BL. 5-2250
BUCKHEAD
MEN'S SHOP
Arrow Shirts
Stetson Hats
Jarman Shoes
McGregor Sportswear
Haspel Suits
CE. 3-6759
3047 Peachtree Rd., N. E.
Official Boy Scout
Trading Post
C&S REALTY
COMPANY
“Specialists in Commercial-
Industrial Real Estate"
604 Mortgage Guarantee
Building
JA. 4-2053
Warehouses, Stores, Mfg.
Plants, Acreage,
Shopping Center Dev.,
Industrial Dev.,
Subdivision Dev.
Insurance
Eaeh Account Insured
to $10,000 by an
Aganey af tha U. S.
Government.
Accounts Opened In
Person or By Mail
STANDARD
FEDERAL
Savings and Lean Asu’n.
4« tread St., N. W„ Grant Bid*.
ALL Boyd, Sec'y and A tty,
ATLANTA, GA.
“Savi With Safety”
Editor’s Note: 'The complete,
text of the statement by the
Bishops will appear in our De
cember 13 edition.
(N. C. W. C. NEWS SERVICE)
WASHINGTON, — Enforced
segregation cannot be reconciled
with the Christian view of our
fellow man, the Bishops of the
United States have declared.
In a statement issued here the
U. S. Bishops called on “respon
sible and sober-minded Ameri
cans of all religious faiths” to
“sieze the mantle of leadership
from the agitator and the racist.”
The heart of the race question
is “moral and religious,” the
Bishops said, declaring that “it
is vital that we act now and act
decisively.” They added:
“If our attitude is governed
by the great Christian law of
love of neighbor and respect
for his rights, then we can work
out harmoniously the techniques
for making legal, educational,
economic and social adjustments.
“But if our hearts are poi
soned by hatred, or even by
indifferences toward the wel
fare and rights of our fellow
men, then our nation faces a
grave internal crisis.”
The Bishops’ views on segre
gation were contained in a state
ment on “Discrimination and
the Christian Conscience,”
adopted during their annual
meeting at the Catholic Uni
versity of America here.
The statement was issued in
their name by the Administra
tive Board of the National Cath
olic Welfare Conference.
Tha Bishop listed two reasons
why enforced segregation cannot
be reconciled with the Christian
view of man:
1) “Legal segregation, or any
form of compulsory segregation,
in itself and by its very nature
. imposes a stigma of inferiority
upon the segregated people.”
2) “It is a matter of historical
fact that segregation in our
country has led to oppressive
conditions and the denial of
basic human rights for the
Negro.”
In elaborating the first point,
the Bishop asserted that, even
had the “separate but equal”
doctrine been carried out in
practice, the existence of segre
gation would still have re
mained a violation of “the
Christian view of man’s nature
and rights.”
The “oppressive conditions’ 5
created for the American Negro
by segregation are evident in
education, job opportunity and
housing, they said.
“Flowing from these areas of
neglect and discrimination,”
they added, “are problems of
health, and the sordid train of
evils so often associated with
the consequent slum conditions.”
The Bishops continued: “One
of the tragedies of racial oppres
sion is , that the evils we have
cited are being used as excuses
to continue the very conditions
that so strongly fostered such
evils.
“Today we are told the
Negroes, Indians and also some
Spanish - speaking Americans
differ too much in culture and
achievements to be assimilated
in our schools, factories and
neighborhoods.
“Some decades back the same
charge was made against the
immigrant, Irish, Jewish, Italian,
Hungarian, German, Russian. In
both instances differences were
used by some as a basis for
discrimination and even for
bigoted ill-treatment.”
The_ immigrant has achieved
his rightful place in American
society, the Bishops said, but
Negroes still seek the same
opportunities.
“They wish an education that
does not carry with it any
stigma of inferiority,” the
Bishops said. “They wish
economic advancement based on
merit and skill. They wish their
civil rights as American citizens.
They wish acceptance based
upon proved ability and achieve
ment. No one who truly loves
God’s children will deny them
this opportunity.”
The Bishops conceded that
“passions and misunderstand
ings” will make it difficult to
reach a solution to the problems
which result from racial dis
crimination.
Working for a solution, they
said, “will take courage. But
quiet and persevering courage
has always been the mark of a
true follower of Christ.”
“The porblems we inherit to
day,” they added, “are rooted
in decades, even centuries, of
custom and cultural patterns.
Changes in deep-rooted attitudes
are not made overnight.”
The Bishops condemned both
“a gradualism that is merely a
cloak for inaction” and “rash
impetuosity that would sacrifice
the achievements of decades in
ill-timed and ill-considered ven
tures.”
Men of good will, they said,
“must act quietly, courageously
and prayerfully before it is too
late.”
The Bishops noted that in
1943 they issued a statement
urging racial justice. They said
in the intervening 15 years the
“barriers of prejudice and dis
crimination” have “eroded” to
some degree.
In recent years, the Bishops
said, the issues involved in the
race question “have become
confused and the march toward
justice and equality has been
slowed if not halted in some
areas.”
The time has come, they de
clared, to “cut through the maze
of secondary or less essential
issues and to come to the heart
of the problem.” The essence of
the race question, they empha
sized, is “the trancedent moral
issues.”
MARRIAGES
o-
-o
| KELLY-LUCCHESE |
O (j
ATLANTA — Genevieve The-
rese Lucchese, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Samuel Francis Luc
chese and William Joseph Kel
ly, son of Mr. and Mrs. Daniel
J. Kelly of Washington, D. C.
were married November 9th at
the Cathedral of Christ the King
with a nuptial mass, Rt. Rev.
Msgr. Joseph G. Cassidy offi
ciating.
O O
KROJESKI-VALENTI
U-
-O
ATLANTA — Miss Catherine
Dolores Valenti, daughter of
Dominic Valenti and the late
Mrs. Valenti and Vernon John
Krojeski of Chicago, son of Mr.
and Mrs. John Krojeski of Chi
cago, were married November
8th with a nuptial mass at the
Nativity of Our Lord Church,
Rev. Felix Donnelly officiating.
O ——O
BATES-TAYLOR
O-
-O
ATLANTA — Mary Louise
Taylor, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Walter T. Taylor, and Wil
liam Murray Bates, son of Mr.
and Mrs. F. B. Bates of Soper-
ton were married November
14th at the Cathedral of Christ
the King, Rev. John Mulroy of
ficiating.
O
O
SMITH-MELANCON
O-
— -O
SAVANNAH—Miss Rose Ma
rie Melaneon, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. H. J. Melaneon and
Gettis C. Smith, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Henry G. Smith were mar
ried November 8th at the Bless
ed Sacrament Church, Rev. Ed
ward Frank officiating.
O O
! GALE-SOLLAR |
O- o
SAVANNAH — Miss Jean
Elizabeth Sollar, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Franklin
of Savannah and Donald James
Gale,- son of Mr. and Mrs. Albert
B. Gale of Avon Park, Florida
were married November 8th at
the Sacred Heart Church, Rev.
William Coleman officiating.
East Point Ford Co.
Sales . 9 Service
1230 N. MAIN PL. 3-2121
EAST POINT, GA.
PROFESSIONAL
■N SMAU BRASSES - WOODWINDS
STRINGS & PERCUSSION INSTRUMENTS , d-
Any Time — Anywhere
Call a TAXI
RADIO CABS
DECATUR
CO-OP CABS
310 E. HOWARD AVE.
24-Hour Service
Passengers Insured
Trips Anywhere
DE. 7-3866 — DE. 7-17C1
DECATUR, GA.
GEORGIA BISHOPS WITH NEW CARDINAL—His Eminence Cardinal Arnleto Giovanni
Cicognani is pictuied with Aichbishop O Hara and Bishop Hyland. The occasion was the erection
of the Diocese of Atlanta and the installation of Bishop Hyland as Bishop.—(Lane Bros. Photo).
William G. Hobbs
Savannah Services
SAVANNAH — Funeral serv
ices for William G. Hobbs were
held November 18th at the
Chapel of the Little Sisters of
the Poor.
Survivors are a son, William
G. Hobbs Jr. of Warner Robins;
four sisters, Mrs. Mary E. Per
ry, Mrs. W. J. Farrell, Mrs.
P. E. Fitzpatrick and Miss Alice
Hobbs, several nieces and
nephews.
Savannah Services
For Charles Coyle
SAVANNAH — Funeral serv
ices for Charles B. Coyle were
held November 15th at the
Blessed Sacrament Church.
Survivors are his wife, Mrs.
Christine G. Coyle; two daugh
ters, Mrs. John J. Sullivan' of
Savannah, Mrs. C. S. Cowgill of
Los Angeles, California; two
grandchildren and several niec
es and nephews.
Services For
Mrs. U'Neili
AUGUSTA — Miss Harriett
O'iMeiu cnect Novemoer bm at
local rnlirmary after an extend
ed illness.
Ine nody was conveyed to
Winning ton, N. u., for funeral
services.
bne nad lived in Augusta
three years and was a meumer
or oi. maty s-un-tne-nul Unurcn.
burvtvors are a sister, ivirs.
Eugene p. none of .augusia,
anu two nepfiews, ifugn V.
times of bauauury, N. and
Eugene P. noKe, ar. of Augusta.
The man who courts trouble
has no reasbn to turn down the
light.
Services For
Mrs. Anderson
SAVANNAH — f uneral serv
ices for Mrs. nefen f. Ander
son were field fNovember tutu
at uie burned. fieart enuren,
Rev.. lNorbert E. McGowan of
ficiating'.
for good clean fun
ROLLER SKATE
• It’s great! Keeps the
family together . . . enjoy
ing a fun-filled evening.
2211 ROSWELL ROAD
MARIETTA, GA.
PH. 9-9329
LIBERAL
IHWEJIIS
01
gtfHfBim
Savings received by ihe
lOfh Earn Dividends
for That Month
PO. 7-9774
TRI-CITY
FEDERAL
Association
Savings & Loan
606 South Central Ave.
Hapeville
24-Hr. Service - Passengers Insured
Blue Top & Veterans
Cab Company
TWO PHONES: 47-3146 — 47-3191
Brookhaven Chamblee
f/oraville
A. i. BOHN COMPANY
Brick, Building Tile, Spectra Glaze Concrete Blocks
CEdar 7-6461, Atlanta, Ga., 3229 Cains Hill Place, N. W.
Buckhead Typewriter Service
TYPEWRITERS ADDING MACHINES
3103 Peachtree Road, N. E. CE. 3-9487
Atlanta, Ga.
I
SHOE STORE
“CORRECT FIT AND SATISFACTION ASSURED”
Next to Woolworih's
"Home of Red Goose Shoes"
Shoe Headquarters in Brookhaven
BUCKHEAD KIDDIE KOLLECE
DAY NURSERY
CE. 7-4007
234 PHARR ROAD, N. E.
ATLANTA, GA.
For Only $10.00 Per Week, Wc:
1. Pick your child up in the morning.
2. Drive him home in time for supper.
3. Juice and cookies at mid-morning.
4. A hot lunch at noon.
5. Sleep or nap from 12:30 till 2:30 p. m.
6. All activities supervised by Mrs. Clark, Registered Nurse, State of
Georgia.
7. Pick up children of school age at home — bring to Kiddie Kollege. till
school time — take to school — pick up from school and bring back
to Buckhead Kiddie Kollege, and bring home in evening.
We are open until 1 A. M. at night
for ihe convenience of working par
ents and folks going out for the eve
ning. We enroll children and trans
port them to and from the following
schools:
R. L, HOPE SCHOOL
ROCK SPRINGS ELEMENTARY SCHOOL
GARDEN HILLS SCHOOL
CHRIST THE KING SCHOOL
JUNIOR LEAGUE SCHOOL OF SPEECH