Bulletin (Monroe, Ga.) 1958-1962, May 28, 1960, Image 6

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AGt£j C lriHj X3 U J-jJ-jHi 1 ilN, -VLciV z6, ±i)0<J CUKBSIDt KtLlGIUN CHAT I crt Nijfcf—T.45 Mef . Wed Sr,I , 5.. n 2 f v mm .--I ?f) $> n tl % t TV CALLS 1 50 WITH THIS AD CE. 3-2827 Brookhaven, Buckhead, Chamblee & Adjacent Areas Night and Sunday included! BROOKHAVEN tv va ser Tc E 3990 Peachtree Rd. v N. E. Atlanta Regular $1.59 value for 99c QUALITY SPORTSWEAR SHIRTS Boys' Sizes 6-16 — Men's Sizes Small, Medium and Large • COMPLETE WASHABILITY—Won't fade or shrink • DURABILITY—Strong, long lasting fabric • SMARTLY STYLED—For fit and comfort F. W. WOOLWORTH PEACHTREE ST. IN BROOKHAVEN Coggins Shoe Store E. REID GEIGER, Pres. 46 WEST PARK SQUARE MARIETTA, GEORGIA S. A. WHITE I OSL CO., Inc. Distributor Sinclair Products MARIETTA, GA. Commercial Bank & Trust Company Griffin, Georgia Member of Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Copeland Company CONTRACTORS Heating, Plumbing, Air Conditioning, and Electrical Work Sheet Metal Fabrication Day Phone 9441 Night Phone 3529 342 W. SOLOMON STREET GRIFFIN, GEORGIA U. 1= SEEN IS ‘LONG STEP’ " ’ II ING V 'il JURIDICAL ORGANIZATION In New York, street corner meetings in the heart of Times Square, and Greenwhich Vil lage are giving competition to the worlds of bright lights and beatniks. The speakers are not sidewalk crackpots or political lecturers. They are members of the Catholic Evidence Guild, who are there to explain their religion to anyone who wants to listen. A member of tne Guild is shown sepaking to passerby in Greenwhich Village.—(NC Photos) First Armenian Ordination In U.S. BOSTON (NC)—His Eminence Gregory Peter XV Cardinal Agagianian, Pro-Prefect of the Sacred Congregation for the Propagation of the Faith, con ducted the first Armenian Rite ordination in the U.S. at a cere mony May 21. Cardinal Agagianian ordained the Rev. Mr. Solomon J. Makoul in Holy Cross Church, Cam bridge, Mass. The Rev. Mr. Makoul, a member of the Maro- nite Rite, will serve in the Nor wich, Conn., diocese. Besides serving in the Sacred Congregation for the Propaga tion of the Faith—the Church’s chief mission agency—Cardinal Agagianian is Patriarch of Cili cia of the Armenians, a post which makes him spiritual lead er of some 200,000 Armenian Rite Catholics. On the same day as the ordi nation, the Cardinal received an honorary doctorate of humane letters from Newton (Mass.) College of the Sacred Heart. Cardinal Agagianian was in Boston from May 20 to 23. On May 22 he was guest of honor at a dinner to be given by His Eminence Richard Cardinal Cushing, Archbishop of Boston, the Boston Armenian communi ty, and the archdiocesan Cath olic Lawyers’ Guild. (N.C.W.C. News Service) MILWAUKEE — The United Nations is “not the ideal inter national juridical organization, but it is a long step toward the achievement of it,” according to the general secretary of the Na tional Catholic Welfare Confer ence. “The multilingual, multicul tural and multinational U. N. provides a center not only for exchange, but also for harmo nizing action in accordance with accepted principles based on justice, respect for human rights and international law,” declared Msgr. Paul F. Tanner. He gave the keynote address (May 13) at the first Wisconsin state conference on the United Nations, called by Gov. Gaylord A; Nelson. Msgr. Tanner declared that the U. N. is a “start” toward “the kind of world society we should have to organize to cor respond to mankind’s funda mentally social nature and needs even if there were no cold war or atomic bombs.” “As members of -the "hutna'A race, as brothers with a com mon Father,” he said, men of all races and nationalities “have an inherent relationship of love which cries for recog nition and exercise.” He conceded that “there is an understandable tendency for the United States, partly be cause of the imperfect nature of the U. N., to bypass it in times of crisis in favor of direct ac tion with the other nation in volved.” “We still find it difficult ■ sometimes not to send in the Marines,” he said. Nevertheless, he continued, the work of the U. N. “has been mote fruitful than most people realize.” He said U. N. achievements include the following: aiding in the withdrawal of Soviet troops from Iran in 1946, helping end the communist war in Greece, defending South Korea from communist aggression, promot ing : a truce between India and Pakistan in Kashmir, avoiding a major war during the Suez crisis by bringing world public opinion to bear to force a quick end'-to hostilities, and creating an International Atomic Energy Agency for peaceful uses of atomic power. We SerVe GUARDED QUALITY Ice Cre i.. fi. BEST WISHES From Manley & Adams Marietta, Ga. V GRIFFIN LOAN SERVICE, Inc. PHONE 5572 - • Personal Loans • Automobile Financing 114 W. SOLOMON ST, GRIFFIN, GA. Estalished 1940 India May Suffer Manpower Mortage, M Population Prelate States (N.C.W.C. News Service) DETROIT — The Archbishop of Delhi said here that instead of a population explosion India may soon face a manpower shortage. Archbishop Joseph A. Fer nandes, in the United States for a two-month tour, said con struction of a new dam for elec trification and vast irrigation projects may soon make India a food exporting country. “I think that America and other Western nations are be coming unnecessarily alarmed about any population explos ion,” said the prelate whose di ocese includes the Indian cap ital of New Delhi. “India, with about one-sixth of the world’s population, also has one-fifth of the world’s arable land. Vast tracts of it, however, are lying fallow, be cause of a lack of water, and this will soon be corrected. “I do not think India’s "birth control program will succeed, because the people in the vil lage do not like it. We. are con vinced that within about four years India will be producing more food than its people re quire.” Communism is no great threat in the Indian states, the Archbishop said, despite recent border invasions by Red Chi nese troops. “Indians, communists includ ed, do not like foreigners in vading their country,” Arch bishop Fernandes explained. “These Chinese incursions aroused Indian nationalism and have split the Communist party there badly.” He said that another blow to communism was the defeat of Eisenhower Sees Portugal Church, State Leaders LISBON, (Radio, NC)—Pres ident Eisenhower met the top leaders of both Church and State in Portugal during his 24- hour stop here (May 19. and 20). Guests at the luncheon given in honor of Mr. Eisenhower shortly afteq - his arrival by Por tugal’s President Americo Tho- maz included His Eminence Manuel Cardinal . Goncalves Cerepeira, Patriarch of Lisbon, and Archbishop Giovanni Pan- ico, Apostolic Nuncio to Portu gal. The Cardinal and the Nun cio were also guests at the din ner given by President- Eisen hower at the Queluz Palace that evening. Archbishop Panico, as dean of the diplomatic corps, represented his fellow foreign envoys at the American Presi dent’s dinner. Mr. Eisenhower arrived from Paris at Lisbon’s airport in mid morning. In his initial speech he recalled his previous visit here nine years ago, when he was NATO supreme command er, and expressed pleasure on returning during the fifth cen tenary of Prince Henry the Navigator. He asserted that there are no great problems between the United States and Portugal. Both have a history of mutual friendship, both are members of the United Nations and of NATO, and they will continue to march togeher owards peace and freedom, he said. Following President Eisen hower’s dinner, a reception was held. Among the guests were James Sappington, former U. S. foreign service officer who now heads the Portuguese mission of Catholic Relief Services-Na- tional Catholic Welfare Confer ence, and the Rev. Michael Tes ta, American Presbyterian cler gyman residing here. Form the habit of thinking—it sooths a tired mind and body. The fellow who lives only to please himself must always furnish all the applause. Polish Officia Letter To §ardi LONDON, (NC)—A Polish bishop has protested seizure by Polish customs officials of a let ter from His Holiness Pope John XXIII to Poland’s Primate, it has been reported here. London’s Polish Daily and Soldiers’ Daily reported that the papal letter to His Erqinence Stefan Cardinal Wyszynski was taken from Bishop Kazimierz Kowalski of Chelmno, who was carrying it to the Cardinal on his way home from a visit to Rome. Bishop Kowalski, the daily said, demanded the return of the letter in his protest to Poland’s communist government. The newspaper added that Polish customs officials also took 2,000 holy pictures and several score scientific .books away from Bishop Kowalski. He had received them as presents during his Rome visit. Instead of returning home after the seizure, the paper said, Bishop Kowalski went imme diately to Cardinal Wyszynski’s Miss Davis Class Officer At Chestnut Hill PHILADELPHIA—The Fresh man Class of Chestnut Hill Col lege has elected Miss Linda Ann Davis as treasurer for next year. Miss Davis, a psychology major, is the daughter of Mrs. Joseph Carr Davis of 237 Gor don Street, Savannah, Georgia. Among cither activities Miss Davis served as entertainment chairman for a class social and is presently acting as committee head of a Freshman Initiation Program. residence, from which he sent his protest to the government. Red congressional candidates last year at the polls in Kerala state. The Archbishop, whose an cestors were baptized by St. Francis Xavier more than 400 years ago, said that there are about 5,750,000 Catholics in In dia, five million of them in the southern states. According to the Archbishop, Christian missioners find their greatest encouragement among the primitive, , devil-worshiping Bihar tribes,, who are friendly. Almost 600,000 of them have become Catholics, he said. To iiseuss lission Work TV Program NEW YORK (NC) — A mar ried couple with four children will discuss the lay missionary work overseas on a television program May 29. Leonard and Rosemary Pet erson will be featured on the Lamp Unto My Feet program to be shown on the Columbia Broadcasting System television network from 10 to 10:30 a. m., EDT. The program is being pro duced in cooperation with the National Council of Catholic Men. It will open with a 15-minute episode about the life of a lay missionary. I* c| « ei W. B. WARNELL, President Established 1904 THE i STATES CO. Manufacturing Stationers Bank and Office Outfitters Book Store OVER 30 YEARS AT 120 E. TAYLOR ST. GRIFFIN, GA. Troup Dairies Bottled Health 219 South 6th St. Phone 5557 GRIFFIN, GEORGIA