Bulletin (Monroe, Ga.) 1958-1962, February 20, 1960, Image 2

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t ft. *- .TUT BULLETIN, February 20, i960 BILL DALY'S RED BARN CE, S-4G25 • CE. 3-4531 THIRD BISHOP OF CAMDEN HEADS SEE WHERE MISSIONARIES ONCE HAD TO GO AROUND IN DISGUISE East Point Ford Co. 1230 N. MAIN PL. 3-2121 LAST POINT, GA. SMALL BRASSES - WOODWINDS ii ' STRINGS A PERCUSSION INSTRUMENTS ^ Napoli Restaurant Italian Ownsd and Operated Specializing in Homemade Lasagna, Spaghelii, Pizza, Chicken Cacciaiora, Veal Parmigiana, Marsala, Veal Pizzaiola 2833 Peachtree Rd., N. E. CE. 3-9276 Atlanta. Ga. 4 % $10,000 by FSLIC We Pay Postage On Mail Accounts Current Rate op Savings Standard Federal Savings & Loan Assn. 48 Broad St. NW, Atlanta 3 Ga. MU. 8-SS19 (N.C.W.C. NEWS SERVICE) The hew Bishon of Camden is the third to head that 21-year- old See whose present strength can be traced back to Jesuit missioners who had to move cautiously through the country side in disguise. From the Jesuit mission of Old St. Josenh’s in Philadel phia, across the Delaware River from Camden, priests riding on horseback laid the first founda tions o f the Church in the mid dle of the 18th century. The Jesuit priests had, to trav el disguised as physicians to evade being' penalised under a law that denied freedom of worship. The baptismal register of Fa ther Theodore Schneider, S.J., indicates that he made his first trip, from Philadelphia to New Jersey on October 15. 1743, He went to the center of the glass industry, at Salem, so the colon ists could receive the sacra ments. Father Schneider and later missionaries, some working out of the New York a^ea, were pio neers in the establishment of the Diocese (now Archdiocese) of Newark in 1851, the Diocese of Trenton in 1881 and the Dio cese of Camden in 1937. The Prs + Ordinary of Camden was Bishop Bartholomew .1, Eustace, nastor of Blessed Sac raments church. New Rochelle, N. Y. For 21 vears he had been a teacher at St. Joseph’s Semi nary, Yonkers, N. Y. He was consecrated in New York’s St. Patrick’s cathedral, bv Cardinal Patrick Hayes and enthroned in Camden’s Cathe- C & S REALTY COMPANY “Specialists in Commercial- Indutsrial Real Estate” 604 Mortgage Guarantee Building Warehouses, Stores, Mfg. Plants, Acreage, Shopping Center Dev., Industrial Dev., Subdivision Dev., Insurance MIKE & STEVE SERT1CH JA. 4-2053 Herbert A# Cline Realty Company REALTORS Member Multiple Listing Service Crii-9 CE. 3-1164 Res. CE. 3-3218 3138 Map’s Drive {at Buckhead)—Kroger Parking Level FRED A. YORK PEST CONTROL SERVICE Our Slogan — Nearly Right Won't Do Our Service —- Always Guaranteed Our Products on Sale at Office CALL FOR FREE INSPECTION OR INFORMATION 738 State St., N. W. Atlanta, Georgia your lump Sum Savings.. ■ with tins ^wiaBtcd Savings Areod&tioi where roar money consistently earns higher-th&n-averag* earning* — without or risk on your part Every «bc month*, receive a. check far the extra dollar# your hare earned. Opes your «oawat tkit Mutual Federal Savings & Loan Association JACKSON 3-8282 205 AUBURN AVENUE, N. E. ATLANTA, GA. (Liberal Dividend Rale — Insured by F. D. I. C.) Each Account Insured Up To $10,000.00 SAVE BY MAIL dral of the Immaculate Concep tion on May 4, 1938. Although beset by illness dur ing most of his reign, Bishop Eustace was an active admini strator. He increased the number of parishes, established several new high schools and built numerous elementary schools. But his major building achieve ment was Our Lady of Lordes Hospital, Camden. Bishop Eustace died Decem ber 11, 1956. Bishop McCarthy, Auxiliary Bishop of Newark, and, like Bishop Eustace, a vet eran of many years as a semi nary instructor, succeeded him on March 19, 1957. The southern New Jersey dio cese by then had passed the 200,000 mark in Catholic popu lation and had nearly 90 par ishes. Less than two days after his enthronement, Bishop McCar thy suffered a heart attack. He remained in Our Lady of Lourdes Hospital for six weeks. When he recovered, the dio cese began to progress, with emphasis nlaced on the develop ment of Catholic education. During his short reign Bishop McCarthy presided at numerous school groundbreakings. He re peated in his addresses the theme he set fourth on the day of his. apnointment -—■ the neces- sitv for Catholic education. Conscious that thousands of children in his growing diocese were denied normal Catholic education, Bishop McCarthy stressed the Confraternity of . Christian Doctrines, with its program of religious instruction for children attending public schools. Despite medical advice to slow down, Bishop McCarthy followed an active schedule. He appeared at parish building dedications, diocesan organiza tion meetings and sessions of civic groups. In September, 1959, he made the required “ad limina” visit to Rome and was received in audience by His Holiness Pope John XXIII. On Dec. 20, 1959, six days be fore his death, Bishop McCarthy announced that he planned to issue a call for increased lay participation in the Mass. On Christmas Eve, the Bish op offered Mass in the cathedral. Christmas Day he went to Hill side, N. J., to visit his sister, Miss Agnes McCarthy. While preparing to vest for Mass on December 26 in the chapel of Archbishop Damiano Named New Bishop Of Camden Diocese WASHINGTON, (NC)—Arch bishop Celestinfii Damiano has been transferred from the office of Apostolic Delegate in South Africa to be Archbishop-Bishop of Camden, New Jersey. The appointment, made by His Holiness Pope John XXIII, was announced here by Arch bishop Egidio Vagnozzi, Apos tolic Deglate to the United States. A native of Dunkirk, New York, and a priest of the Dio cese of Buffalo at the time of his elevation to the hierarchy six years ago, Archbishop Da miano returns to the United States to fill a See left vacant by the death of Bishop Justin J. McCarthy on December 26. He will become the third Ordi nary of the diocese, which was established December 9, 1937. At the time of Archbishop Damiano’s consecration it was stated that he became the ninth American, the sixth native-born, to serve as the head of a mis sion in the foreign service of the Holy See. 1 The five native-born Ameri cans who preceded Archbishop Daminao in the Papal foreign service were the late Cardinal Edward Mooney, Archbishop of Detroit; Archbishop Joseph P. Hurley of St. Augustine, Fla.; Archbishop Gerald P. O’Hara, formerly Bishop of Savannah and presently Apostolic Dele- OBITOAftlES 1 Atlanta Services W. N. Bubbico ATLANTA—Funeral services for Mr. William N. Bubbico were held February 10th at the Cathedral of Christ the King, Father James Boyce officiating. Survivors are his daughters, Mrs. Tho. C. Bolden, Chamblee; Mrs. John F. Galagher, Balti more; Mrs. Anthony Marehione, Mrs. Larry Mulianaire, both of Harrison, N. Y.; Mrs. Rocky Tutlo, Port Chester, N. Y.; son, Mr. Albert W. Bubbico; one sis ter and three brothers. For the Eucharistic Congress ARCHBISHOP DAMIANO gate to Great Britain; His Eminence A 1 o i s i u s Cardinal Muench, formerly Bishop of Fargo, N. D., and Papal Nuncio to Germany, who is presently a member of the Curia in Rome, and Bishop Patrick J. Byrne, of the Maryknoll Fathers, who represented the Holy ’ See in Korea and presumably died there as a victim of the war in that country. Msgr. Joseph P. McGeough, a priest of the Archdiocese of New York, has been named Apostolic Internuncio to Ethio pia since Archbishop Damiano was named to the post in South Africa. Bv Pro-Castro Press CATHOLICS DENOUNCED FOR MIKOYAN DEMONSTRATIONS HAVANA — The students ar- Catholic student’s , organization Henry Hamburger Invites You To Visit TJ[o 'Ylorthside &t)e(ica tei&en Atlanta's Gourmet Shop 3209 Maple Dr„ NE — Atlanta rested here for demonstrating against Soviet Deputy Premier Anastas Mikoyan were released within two days. But the anticommunist dis play in the presence of the So viet leader, and the gunfire which accompanied it, sparked denunciations in the pro-Castro press against two . Catholic- oriented groups. Combate, strident progovern ment newspaper, charged that classes at the Catholic Univer sity of Villanueva had been sus pended so that students could stage the anti-Mikoyan demon stration. It also called the inci dent an act of revolutionary eonsniracy organized by the Jesuit moderator of the Catho lic Association of University Students and by the new Chris tian Democratic movement. The arrest of members of the the Benedictine Academy at nearby Elizabeth, N. J., the Bishop was stricken for the sec ond time and died in St. Eliza beth’s Hospital several hours later. SHOE STORE ‘CORRECT FIT AND SATISFACTION ASSURED” Next to Woolworih's "Home of Red Goose Shoes" Shoe Headquarters in Brookhaven PAINTS, GLASS, BUILDING MATERIALS John G. Butler Company MILLWORK AND HARDWARE SAVANNAH, GEORGIA Store 2-1161 Plant 2-1164 — Over 100 Years of Service — FRED WALTERS 0LDSM0BILE Sales... « .. Service 0 l D S M 0 B 1 l t OLDSMOBILE—General Motors' Best All Round Buy. SIMCA—I imported from Paris — Smart, Thrifty, and fun to drive. BUCKHEAD-TRADED USED CARS YOU CAN TRUST “GROWING THRU COURTESY AND QUALITY SERVICE” 3232 PEACHTREE RD., N. E„ ATLANTA, GA. Call CE. 7-0321 For Free Pick Up and Delivery Phoenix Mutual Lite Ins. Personal Insurance and Investment Program BOB MOON Suite 457,1401 Peachtree Bldg. TR. 2-8889 Atlanta 9, Ga. SERVICES FOR MRS. KING AUGUSTA—Funeral serivees for Mrs. Mattie Huebel King were held February 8th at the Sacred Heart Church, Father Gerald Armstrong, S. J., officiating. Survivors include a daughter, Miss Lenora King, of Augusta; two sisters, Mrs. J. D. McClain of Rock Hille, S. C., and Mrs. J. P. McDonnesl, of Augusta; two brothers, George W. Huebel and C. J. Huebel of Augusta; and an aunt Mrs. Ethel Boyd of Gracewood, Ga. Atlanta Services Mrs. Addie Steele ATLANTA—Funeral serivees for Mrs. Addie Steele were held February 6th at St. John Mel- kite Church, Father Wm. H. Haddad officiating. Among the survivors are: Mr. and Mrs. Wm. J. Steele; Mr. and Mrs. Thomas E. Steele; Mr. Powell Steele; Mr. and Mrs. J. Andrew Bearden, Dawsonville, Ga., and several grandchildren. SERVICES FOR J. M. LOGAN AUGUSTA—Funeral services for Mr. Joseph M. Logan were held at Sacred Heart Church February 10th, Father James D. Loeffler S.J., officiating. immediately stirred memories of the persecution the same group suffered . during the Batista dictatorship. In Decem ber, 1958, less than a month be fore Fidel Castro and his follow ers succeeded in over-throwing the government of President Fulgencio Batista, t four mem bers of the Catholic student “group were "tortured and hang ed by Batista police. Combate insinuated that the demonstration was. a plot by Catholics against Mr. Mikoyan and against the Castro govern ment. It said the demonstration was engineered by Father Amando Llorente, S.J. A little more than a year ago, Father Llorente, as moderator of the Catholic students’ group, was on the blacklist of the Batista police. Students who took part in the demonstration said after they were released that police were responsible for the gun fire which delayed ceremonies at which Mr. Mikoyan opened the Soviet cultural exhibition here. Their version was that they were staging an anti communist demonstration, not a counterrevolutionary one. Their plan was to lay a wreath and Cuban flag at the statue of the patriot Jose Marti in the central park. Mr. Mikoyan had placed a wreath bearing the hammer and sickle emblem at the statue earlier, the students said, and they wanted to “vindi cate” Marti. The students car ried postors proclaming “Down with Communism” and “Viva Fidel.” Police arrested them, the stu dents said, and dispersed the demonstration by firing shots in the air. Communist elements who had meanwhile gathered near the Soviet exhibit deploy ed to attack the anticommunist Mrs. Ida Abraham Atlanta Services ATLANTA—Funeral services for Mrs. Ida Campbell Abraham were held at the Sacred Heart Church February 2nd. Survivors are her sons, Mr. John R. Campbell. Mr. Francis J. Campbell; sister, Mrs. W. F. Gillooley; seven grandchildren. FLOWERLAND GREENHOUSES Retail — Wholesale Greater Atlanta Deliveries Flowers for Every Occasion Chamblee-Dunwoody Rd. Chamblee, Ga. — GL. 7-3455 HOUSEHOLD DEVOE & RAYNOLDS QUALITY PAINTS INDUSTRIAL DEVOE PAINTS DEVOE & RAYNOLDS CO., INC. 228 Techwood Drive, N. W. Atlanta, Ga. BUCKHEAD GULF SERVICE A. C. Rakestraw, Jr., Dealer ROAD SERVICE — TIRES — BATTERIES ACCESSORIES — BRAKE WORK & TUNE UP CE. 7-9788 — CE. 3-9146 3145 Peachtree Rd., N. E. Atlanta, Ga. CURRENT RATE r BROOKHAVEN FEDERAL SAVINGS & LOAN ASSOCIATION 4008 Peachtree Road, Atlanta i 9; ,Ga. Accounts .Opened, by Mail - CE. 7-6406 R. C COLBERT, President X . . . .^ . •XvX-’ ^ li-ililBI. Prof. Hans-Jurgen Kallmann, noted Munich portrait painter works in his studio on one of two paintings of Pope John XXIII which the Bavarian Government has commissioned him to paint for the International Eucharistic Congress to be held in Munich in. 1960. Last October, the artist had an opportunity to make a portrait of the Pope at the Vatican during three sittings granted him. (NC Photos) Services Fer firs. McGinnis HAPEVILLE — Funeral serv ices for Mrs .James E. McGinnis were held at St. John- the Evangelist Church February 2, Father John J. O’Shea and Fa ther Daniel McCormick offi ciated. Mrs. -McGinnis was a member of the Third Order of Mary. Survivors are her husband, James E. McGinnis; a son, An thony McGinnis of Hapeville; parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Carr, La Grange; Sisters, Mrs. Bobby Moore, LaGrange; Mrs. Arthur Oden, Chamblee; Mrs. Curtis Dewe, Covedo, Calif., and bro thers Charles and Tony X. Carr, both of LeGrange; John Robert Carr, Covedo, Calif, and Jos eph James Carr, Laurel Miss. faction, but were prevented by the police. Even after the release of the arrested students, however, the police declined to comment on the incident. Requiem For Sr. Margaret Mary The Most Rev. Francis E. Hy land D.D., J.C.D., Bishop of At lanta presided at a Solemn High Requium Mass said for Sister Margaret Mary, 76, at St. Jos eph’s Home in Washington, Georgia. Sister Margaret Mary was the former Miss Ethel Taylor of Macon before entering the Sis terhood. Sister taught Music at the Washington Home, con ducted by the Sisters of St. Joseph, for a number of years. She was the last member of a family of seven. She is survived by two nieces, Miss Ella May League, Macon, and Mrs. Wil liam Best, Tuscon, Ariz., and a nephew in Tampa, Florida. The Rev. Alfred S. Paolucci offered the Solemn High Mass, assisted by Rev. Walter Mattiato F.S.C.J., and the Rev. Peter Tarquini F.S.C.J., who acted as Deacon and Sub Deacon respec tively. The Rt. Rev. Msgr. Michael J. Regan J.C.D., was the Master of Ceremonies. Seated in the Sanctuary were the Chaplains to His Excellency, Bishop Hy land, the Rev. Dale Freeman and the Rev. Cronan Kelly O.F.M. Clergy attending the funeral services were the Rt. Rev. Msgr. Cornelius L. Ma loney Pr.D., the Rev. Walter J. Donovan and the Rev. R. Don ald Kiernan. Mother Eulalia C.S.J., Provin cial Superior; Sr, Alice Joseph C.S.J., Assistant Provincial; Sr. Mary Louise C.S.J., Sr. Mary Margaret C.S.J., and Sr. Rose Margaret C.S.J., all from At lanta, and Sr. Loretta Joseph C.S.J., from Atlanta were in at tendance. Burial, conducted by the Most Reverend Bishop, was held in the Catholic Cemetery in Washington. Furniture Discount Store JEROME'S INC. QUALITY FURNITURE AT DISCOUNT PRICES Cash or Bank Financing 3093 Peachtree Road, N.E. CE. 7-3248 OurjPadif of tho hMs CAMP For boys and girls, ages 7 to 16. 200 acres, 37 buildings in the shadows of the Blue Ridge Moun tains. Playgrounds for camp sports, large modern pool, moun tain water lake, with all activities guided by trained counselors. Ideal accommodations in Lodge for visiting parents. Camp pro vides pickup service to or from nearest rail, air, bus terminal. A camp for youngsters to grow . . , spiritually, healthfully. Run from your responsibili ties and you’ll never go very far. Clairmont "66" Service Station YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD "66" DEALER Road Service — Phillip's Tires Batteries and Accessories ME. 4-9119 2767 Clairmont Rd. at Expressway Atlanta, Ga. • We Give S & H Green Stamps 9 We Pick Up and Deliver People who do their work well and make good are never asked for explanations. •PER ANNUM .,QURRENT RATE AN APPEAL Would you place a foreign senior high school student (boy or girl) in your home for one school year beginning August 1960. Host families are needed for several foreign teenage students participating in the 1960-1961 International High School Student Program. This is a golden opportunity to do a Christ-like work on an International level for youth — you and your family will enjoy this young person. Write immediately for details — no obligation entailed. INTERNATIONAL HIGH SCHOOL STUDENT PROGRAM Youth Department, NCWC 1312 Massachusetts Avenue, N.W. Washington 5, D. C.