Bulletin (Monroe, Ga.) 1958-1962, April 04, 1959, Image 6

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PAGE o—THE BULLETIN, April 4, 1959 Gaines Edgewood Pharmacy PRESCRIPTIONS — DRUGS 468 EDGEWOOD AVE., N. E. JA. 3-8150 ATLANTA, GA. Marty's Beauty Salon Spring Is Here! Visit- our Solon for a beautiful new hair-do by fine hair stylists CE. 7-786G 2971 PEACHTREE RD., N. E. ATLANTA, GA. Berry Realty Company ME. 4-7351—1408 Medlock Rd. TR. 2-6695 — 1547 Piedmont Ave., N. E. CE. 7-8641 — 3277 C. Roswell Rd., N. E. ATLANTA, GA. GASPERINI'S FINE UPHOLSTERING DECORATIVE FABRICS OF ALL SORTS TR. 4-4845 824 NORTH HIGHLAND AVE., N. E. ATLANTA, GA. DeGive - Dunham & O'Neil, Inc. 1478 Mecasin St., N. W. TR. 6-4303 Atlanta, Ga. ALL DAY FISH FRY Delicious Filet of Fish Baskets 2 FOR $1.00 Each Thursday, Friday, Saturday In April Rajar Drive-In 1085 LINDBERGH DRIVE, N. E. (At Cheshire Bridge Road) CE. 7-6533 Devout People In Moscow’s Sole Catholic Church Moved Visiting Educator To Tears CINCINNATI (NC) — What an American Catholic educator saw in Moscow’s one function ing Catholic Church last fail brought tears to his eyes. Dr. Urban H. Fleege, head of the De Paul University, Chica go, education department, told the Cincinnati Medievalists and Xavier University students that he went an hour early to 8 o’ clock Mass in Moscow’s Church of St. Louis of the French. “At 7 o’clock the church was filled. I don’t know what time the people arrived. Three- fourths of them were women at least 55 years old. There were no young men, no young women, no teen-agers.” All were busy with their pri vate devotions until the priest appeared for Mass. “Only a few prayerbooks or missals were evident,” said Dr. Fleege, “and these were yellow ed and worn with age. Some were stitched together by hand, and at least one that I saw had been written out entirely by hand.” The only representative of a Catholic institution among a group of U. S. educators study ing Russian educational meth ods and institutions, Dr. Fleege confirmed that Catholics are not permitted to publish or to im port Bibles, Catholic newspa pers, missals or other prayer- books, or even songs. During the sermon Dr. Fleege Services For Mrs. Redmond SAVANNAH — Funeral serv ices for Mrs. Rosalie Schroeder Redmond were held March 14th at the Blessed Sacrament Church. SHUFORD PLUMBING CO. REPAIRS • CONTRACTING DR. 7-7122 120 N. Candler Decatur, Ga. MEDLOCK’S PHARMACY PAY ALL UTILITIES AT MEDLOCK'S No Charge lor Service 9 Free Delivery Service 2310 Cascade S. W. PL. 3-4107 Atlanta, Ga. Milton Bradley Co. of Georgia ART SUPPLIES — TOYS — GAMES 384 Forrest Ave. N. E. JA. 5-0551 Atlanta, Ga. BEST WISHES MARY MAC’S TEA ROOM 224 PONCE DE LEON AVE. TR. 5-4337 ATLANTA, GA. WEST SIDE LOAN OFFICE USED APPLIANCES. TV SETS, OLD JEWELRY AT REASONABLE PRICES ALWAYS Ed Weiner, Proprietor 337 Peters Si., S. W. JA. 4-3397 Atlanta, Ga. GEO. E. KINNEY BIN CO., INC. REPUBLIC STEEL DISTRIBUTORS AND EQUIPTO PRODUCTS JA. 3-0539 3331/2 Peachtree St., N. E. Atlanta, Ga. BOOK REVIEWS EDITED BY EILEEN HALL 3087 Old Jonesboro Road, Hapeville, Georgia noticed many of the women tak ing notes. This is common prac tice, he learned, so that the in struction can be passed on to those unable to attend Mass. Many of the women cried in the course of the sermon, he not iced. When he left the church at 10 a. m., the congregation— most of them dressed very shab bily—s till remained, singing hymns and praying. The widely traveled educator said “I have never seen people praying with such earnestness.” “I am not easily moved to tears,” he said, “but the tears came as I watched them. I felt that I was certainly kneeling in the midst of a communion of saints.” Dr. Fleege asserted that young men and women are os tracized if they have anything to do with the Church or with religion—Catholic or any other. That means exclusion from communist youth groups, from vocational opportunities, from most ordinary social contacts. Each issue of ihis Book Page is confided fo the patronage of Mary, Medialrix of All Graces, with the hope fhal every read er and every contributor may be specially favored by her and her Divine Son. PIEDMONT PHARMACY Visit Our Newly Remodeled Store PRESCRIPTIONS • SUNDRIES • DRUGS Delivery Service TR. 2-2211 — Atlanta, Ga. — 991 Piedmont Ave., N. E. J. H. Head, Proprietor READ THE . Atlanta i w ' «»s< ■ A World Published Every Morning Except Monday "News While It- Is News" 31 Cents Weekly Delivered by Carrier SUBSCRIPTIONS BY PHONE JAckson 1-1459 W. A. SCOTT, II, Founder and Publisher (1928-34) C. A. SCOTT, Editor and General Manager BLACK ROBEPEACE- MAKER: Pierre De Smet, by J. G. E. Hopkins, Kenedy, $2.50. mere marie of new FRANCE, by Mary Fabyan Windeatt, Kenedy, $2.50. (Reviewed by John Schroder, S. J.) Publication of these books marked the first anniversary of the American Background Books series of biographies for Catholic youth. Others in the series deal with the lives of Casimir Pulaski, Thomas Don- gan, Margaret Brent, Cortez and his chaplain Fra Olmedo, Father Abram Ryan, and . Alfred E. Smith. “Father De Smet,” said Thomas Hart Benton in Con gress, “has done more for In dian welfare and keeping them in peace and friendship with the United States than an army with banners.” Frequently De Smet was summoned to Wash ington to talk with presidents, senators, and generals about the governments policy of handling (or should I say man-handling?) the Indians. His success as a missionary was evidenced by a chain of his missions across the Northwest. But he never real ized his dream of establishing reductions, as had been done by his fellow-Jesuits in South America — communities or re serves which lifted the ab origines from the jungle to a high degree of civilization. Pres ident Grant dealt the Catholic missions a death-blow. Of 43 Indian reservations, Catholics were excluded by law from all but four. Eighty thousand Cath olic Indians became Protestants as a result. When the Indians heard of De Smet’s death, they wailed and covered their heads with dust. Although this bio graphy was written for teen agers, at least one adult be came quite absorbed in it. Mere Marie of New France is the life of a remarkable wo man, the foundress of the first Ursuline convent in Canada. Her story is the story of Quebec and New France. The school she founded was for the Indian girls whose families had been con verted to Christianity by the missionaries. A history of hero ism, interestingly told for Jean- agers, especially girls. heart good to turn back to the author’s preface in which, among other things, he acknow ledges his particular gratitude to certain “Catholic scholars” who had made possible “access to a considerable body of docu mentary material to me, a stran ger and non-Catholic.” MARY REED NEWLAND Mrs. Mary Reed Newland, who will be the luncheon speak er at the Twentieth Annual Convention of the Savannah Diocesan Council o f Catholic Women, on April 25 and 26 in Macon, is the author of three popular books for the Catholic family. We and Our Children, The Year and Our Children, and The Sainis and Our Children, were published by Kenedy and reviewed in THE BULLETIN soon after their publication. We and Our Children, pub lished in 1954, has been called “a helpful, practical guide to Christian parenthood covering all the subjects on which Cath olic parents most frequently seek advice and direction.” The Year and Our Children, published in 1956, is designed to help parents introduce their children to various practices in accord with the liturgical year. Games, stories, menus, and how- to-do-it ideas, all linked with the Church year, its seasons and feasts, are offered by Mrs. New land from her own experience in teaching her seven children to commemorate the liturgical year at home. The Saints and Our Children, published just a year ago, was called by THE BULLETIN’S re viewer Mrs. Margot Atwood, “a valuable asset in the, task of teaching children about God.” Mrs. Atwood, the mother of nine, found Mrs. Newland’s sug gestions wise and helpful. “It goes far beyond a mere collection of lives of the saints,” she said. “By examining the training and teaching given by the parents of such saints as John Bosco, Dominic Savio, Therese of Lisieux, Maria Goretti, and Bernadette Soubir- ous, valuable lessons . . . are taught . . . Direct advice from St. John Bosco, St. Thomas More, Blessed Claude de la Colombiere, Sister Josefa Mene- dez, is as timely as if written today. . . . Twenty stories of saints, to be memorized and used by parents to stress partic ular virtues, make up the last chapter of the book.” THE EMERGENCE OF LIB ERAL CATHOLICISM IN AMERICA, by Robert D. Cross, Harvard, $5.50. (Reviewed by Leo J. Zuber) Here is a volume with good red meat on its bones, good fare for any day in the year includ ing all days of abstinence. The subject is really facinating even though, as stated by the book’s title, it appears a bit pompous and forbidding. Just imagine, if you have never experienced any appreciable part of it, the United States of the 1800’s with numerous foreign groups flock ing to its shores and settling down among already established peoples. Irish Catholics, French Catholics, German Catholics, Italian Catholics, and others, all Catholics to be sure but distinc tive national groups cast, a bit by choice and a bit by lot, into a new and young national set ting. Then add to these ingredients the spicing of other varying and contrasting elements, intellect ual and non-intellectual, wealth and poverty, conservative and liberal, and all the in-betweens; papal pronouncments on the Im maculate Conception and on rights of labor. These are but some of the contrasting and conflicting cir cumstances which Catholicism in the United States found itself in the century past and through which it emerged with strength and structure intact into the aggressive, united body we see today. Dr. Cross undertook and com pleted, successfully and skill fully, a really monumental task in unrea veiling the tangled ’ threads of a basic formative period of Catholicism in this country. Documentary evidence of his work, for any who may need such evidence after the body of this book, appears in 66 pages of notes and 17 pages of biblography. After experiencing the impact of this volume and realizing even dimly the labor that went into its making, it does one’s Atlanta Services For E. N. Burke ATLANTA—Funeral services for Edward N. Burke were held March 17th at the Sacred Heart Church, Rev. Clarence J. Bigges officiating. Survivors are his wife and stepsons, Harold McCary, Cham- blee Ga. and Robert McCary, Atlanta. RECORD SET CAP DE LA MADELEINE, Que„ (NC). The Shrine of Our Lady of the Holy Rosary here drew a record number of visitors, 1,300,000 persons, dur ing 1958, Father Jacques Rin- fret, O.M.I., director of pil grimages, announced. WILLIAMS METAL CRAFTS Ornamental Iron, Residential, Commercial, Industrial, Rail ings, Columns, Burglar Guards 2004 Moreland Ave., S. E. MA. 7-3043 — Atlanta, Ga. BAGLEY ELECTRIC COMPANY Electrical Contractors — Residential and Commercial Wiring — Motorola TV — Sales and Service Fedders Air Conditioning — Complete Installation 3998 Peachtree Rd„ N. E. in Brookhaven — Atlanta, Ga. BEST WISHES HOGAN REALTY COMPANY Specialists in Southwest Atlanta and Suburban Properties 3766 Campbeliion Rd., S. W. DI. 4-1100 Atlanta, Ga. HICKORY CHICK FOR THE BEST IN BARBECUE TR. 6-9218 1873 Piedmont Road, N. E. Rock Springs Shopping Center Atlanta, Ga. BEST WISHES GRIFFIN COLLEGE OF BARBERING AND BEAUTY CULTURE • It Pays to Look Well Vera L. Brown, Pres. Edith B. Murry, Sec.-Treas. MU. 8-0438 556 Mitchell, S. W. Atlanta RUFF REALTY COMPANY REALTORS SPECIALIZING IN NORTHSIDE HOMES FROM DECATUR TO FAR S. W. 3131 Maple Dr., N. E. CE. 7-6358 Atlanta, Ga. DRASTICALLY REDUCED OWNER SAYS CUT PRICE $2,500 Fabulous bargain in this 4-bedroom 2-bath home in walking distance of Our Lady of Assumpiion School and Church. Won derful 1V2- acre level wooded lot, jusf made for children, plus flagstone patio, BBQ and playhouse. 3181 Lanier Dr. Excl. Mrs. Shulman. ME. 4-3103. SCHEER REALTY CO., INC., REALTORS 59 PEACHTREE PLACE, N. E. TR. 3-1777 RYBERT PRINTING COMPANY PRINTING LITHOGRAPHING "Serving Atlanta Since 1912" TR. 5-4727 550 Forest Road, N. E. Atlanta, Georgia MELTON & McKINNEY, Inc. Plumbing, Heating and Air Conditioning REPAIRS A SPECIALTY 24-HOUR SERVICE 432 E. Howard Ave., Decatur DR. 3-4622 DR. 7-2638 Charles D. McKinney, Sec.-Treas. Ira B. Melton, Pres. JOHN H. HARLAND CO. Commercial and Bank Stationery TR. 5-8771 655 LAMBERT DRIVE, N. E. P. O. 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