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HAY
FUNERAL
HOME
OXYGEN EQUIPPED
AMBULANCE SERVICE
1918 ROSWELL STREET
MARIETTA, GEORGIA
TELEPHONE 8-8681 OR 8-1016
Robert W. (Bob) Hay
★ Completely Air Conditioned.
PRESIDENT URGES DONATIONS
Catholic Relief Agency
Rushes Relief To Chile
(N.C.W.C. News Service)
NEW YORK — The U. S.
Catholic relief agency support
ed by the donations of Ameri
can faithful has sent a wide
range of emergency supplies
valued at more than $325/000 to
help curb suffering in earth
quake-devastated areas of Chi
le.
The efforts of Catholic Relief
Service-National Catholic Wel
fare Conference were comple
mented by the other voluntary
relief agencies, such as Church
World Service, Lutheran World
Relief and the Jewish Joint
Distribution Committee, all of
which also dug into stocks of
emergency supplies.
In the meantime, President
Eisenhower issued an appeal
for Americans to contribute
cash and goods to aid Chileans
left homeless by the series of
natural catastrophes.
He urged offerings to the vol
untary agencies, calling upon
Americans “promptly to dem-
MAYES WARD
FUNERAL HOME
FUNERAL DIRECTORS
Ambulance Service
Marietta, Ga.
408 Church Street
DIAL 8-1511
1926 1960
Our Thirty-fourth Anniversary
110 ATLANTA STREET
MARIETTA, GEORGIA
—
BEST WISHES
TO GRADUATES OF
ST. PIUS X HIGH
SCHOOL
A
S. TUI
INER
- i
Kill# jvry
Funeral Directors
ME. 4-3373
2773 N. DECATUR RD.
DECATUR, GA.
onstrate the great generosity so
characteristic of them.”
CRS-NCWC shipments, most
sent by airplane, have so far
included: 2,500 blankets, thou
sands of vitamins, 12 cases of
blood plasma substitute, 90
bales of clothing, 1,000 flash
lights with 3,000 batteries, 45
tons of heavy clothing, 65 beds,
116,000 square feet of wallboard
and 4,700 pounds of asphalt
paper.
He said aid is needed over a
2,600 mile area — “about two-
thirds of the width of the
United States” — and there is
Weekly Calendar Of Feast Days
(N.C.W.C. News Service)
SUNDAY, June 12 — Trinity
Sunday, celebrated the first
Sunday after Pentecost. It is a
day on which the Church com
memorates in a special manner
One God in Three Divine Per
sons. Generally this date is the
feast of St. John of St. Facun-
dus, Confessor. He was a Span
iard who became a hermit of
the Augustinian Order at Sal
amanca. He was noted for his
devotion to the Mass. The pow
er of his preaching brought
about a reformation in Sala
manca. He denounced the im
purity rife at the time and went
to his death in 1479, poisoned
by a woman whose companion
in sin he had converted.
MONDAY, June 13 — St. An
thony of Padua, Confessor-Doc
tor. He was born in 1195 in Lis
bon, joined the Order of Can
ons Regular at an early age and
transferred to the Franciscans
in 1221. Prompted by a desire
for martyrdom, he set out for
Africa but a storm brought him
to Italy. There under the guid
ance of St. Francis of Assisi, he
began a great career as a
preacher and worker of mira
cles. He died in 1231 and was
canonized a year later by Pope
Gregory IX. He was declared
a. Doctor of the Church by Pope
Pius XII.
TUESDAY, June 14 — St.
Basil the great, Bishop-Confes-
sor-Doctor. One of the most
celebrated of the Greek Fa
thers, he came from a family
of saints, best known of whom
are his brother, St. Gregory
Nyssen, and his sister, St. Ma-
crina. He was born at Caesarea
in Cappadocia, Asia Minor, and
became Bishop of Caesarea in
370. He was known as the father
of monastic life in the East and
combated the Arian heresy. He
ill!!
THE BULLETIN, June 11, I960—PAGE "
BOOK REVIEWS
EDITED BY EILEEN HALL
3087 Old Jonesboro Road., Hapeville, Georgia
“a quick shift to cold winter
weather.”
Other private religious agen
cies have responded to Chilean
needs with vitamin pills, heavy
clothing, blankets and medicine.
These agencies, like CRS-
NCWC, are supported by the
contributions of their church
members.
The Catholic agency's contri
butions come in the U. S. Bish
ops' Relief Fund Appeal which
culminates each year with a
special collection taken up in
most U. S. Catholic churches
on Laetare Sunday.
Each issue of this Book Page
is confided to the patronage of
Mary, Mediatrix of All graces,
with the hope that every reader
and every contributor may be
specially favored by her and her
Divine Son.
(Reviewed by Leo J. Zuber)
AND GOD MADE MAN AND
WOMAN, by Lucius F. Cervan
tes, S.J., Regnery, $4.00.
“All I said this morning was,
‘Pancakes again?’ . . . When I
finally got her calmed down, she
told me that I didn’t love her—
that I never had loved her! How
could she make such a fuss over
a trifle? ‘Pancakes again?’
That’s every word I said. And
what’s more I even ate the
things.”
When God made man and
died in 379.
WEDNESDAY, June 15 — St.
Vitus and Companions, Martyrs.
St. Vitus, a child, with his
nurse, St. Crescentia, and her
husband, St. Modestus, who had
instructed the boy in the Chris
tian Faith, were driven from
their homes by his parents and
forced to flee from Sicily to It
aly. There they were imprison
ed and suffered martyrdom for
the Faith under Diocletian in
302.
THURSDAY, June 16 — Cor
pus Christi, celebrated on the
Thursday after Trinity Sunday
in honor of the Body and Blood
of Christ really present in the
sacrament of the Holy Euchar
ist. This feast was extended to
the universal Church in 1264 by
Pope Urban IV as a means of
making reparation for sins com
mitted against Our Lord in the
Blessed Sacrament. Generally
this date is the feast of SS. Au
reus, Justina and Companions,
Martyrs. It is believed they liv
ed before the seventh century.
During an invasion by the
Huns, St. Aureus, who was
Bishop of Mainz, and St. Jus
tina, his sister, and others were
driven from the See. On his re
turn, his zeal for Christianity
aroused certain evildoers and
while he was offering Mass, he
and his sister and a number of
others were murdered in
church.
FRIDAY, June 17 — St. An-
tidius, Bishop-Martyr. He lived
in the fifth century, and was a
disciple and the successor of St.
Froninus in the Diocese of Bes-
ancon, eastern France. He was
put to death by marauding
Arian vandals at Ruffey, where
his relics are enshrined.
SATURDAY, June 18 — St.
Ephraem of Syria, Deacon-
Confessor-Doctor. He was born
MARRIAGES
o-
-o
SMITH-GREEN
O-
-O
SAVANNAH — Miss Alida
Ann Green, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Frank Slaton Green of
Savannah and Mr. Eugene Vin
cent Smith of Washington,
D. C., son of Mrs. Herbert L.
Smith of Washington, D. C.,
were married May 21st at the
Sacred Heart Church, Rev. Tim
othy Flaherty, O.S.B., officiat
ing.
O O
| BEESON-CASTLEBERRY |
O O
AUGUSTA — Miss Elizabeth
Milledge Beeson, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. James Tobin Bee
son and William Grover Castle
berry, son of Mr. and Mrs. Wil
liam Burton Castleberry of San
ford, N. C., were married May
21st at St. Mary’s-on-the-Hill
Church, Very Rev. Msgr. Dan
iel J. Bourke officiating.
O O
GRADY-MULHERIN
O-
KELLY-CROSS
O-
d3ed lAJidli
ei
3
mm
THE FIRST
NATIONAL BANK
MARIETTA, GEORGIA
Established in 1888
woman, He made them differ
ently for reasons obvious and
not so obvious but far too num
erous to mention. Father Cer
vantes is professor of sociology
at St. Louis University and is
president of the Rocky Moun
tain Council on Family Rela
tions. He is a Harvard man and
dedicates this hook, produced
with Ford Foundation assist
ance, to a respected and re
nowned Harvard professor.
There is written here a great
deal of good sense and good
balance for any mature individ
ual seeking guidance and infor
mation. Those contemplating
marriage, the married, parents
with children to instruct, con
fessors and professors could de
rive a great deal of substance
and sound perspective, or could
re-establish a dimmed, blunted
perspective, on the male—fe
male factor in human society.
This is a book on sex in its
physical aspects but it is far
more than that. The fuss over
pancakes was not exactly sex
ual incompatibility. For those
who seek sane sex information,
here it is, diagrams and discus
sion; no need to go elsewhere
for matter in print. Aside from
the physical differences, the au
thor also delves significantly
into emotional, psychological,
and religious differences. The
child reared in normal home
life is compared with one reared
in the institutional manner be
cause of divorce, death or aban
donment of parents.”
Love is initiated, patterned,
and corroborated by the im
pulses clustering about the dif
ferences of the sexes . . . Perfect
married love is the specific goal
of the invitation provided by
the differences of the sexes. Per
fect social and divine love is a
generic and ultimate goal pro
vided by the same differences
of the sexes. As God is love, as
the goal of existence is love, as
the specific generic, and ulti
mate goal of sexual differences
is love, as the great need of
children is love, as love is the
unifying force of society, we
conclude that love is the ‘sweet
mystery of life,’ that ‘it is love
and love alone the world is
seeking .” ’ And that is the near
est to a saccharine passage to be
found anywhere in the book.
Many adults on perusing this
book will say to himself, “I
wish I had had this book a few
years ago when I needed it.”
THE PRESENCE OF GOD,
by Jean Danielou, Helicon,
$1.95.
(Reviewed by Elizabeth Hester)
This small book is described
on its jacket as a “meditation.”
The word is apt; such is the
book’s length and design that it
may even serve as a model for
someone looking for a working
idea of what a meditation is. (I
suggest such a search is not un
thinkable.)
Using the key word “Tem
ple,” Father Danielou traces it
through a series of applications.
He thinks of all creation as a
Temple. This is followed by
contemplation of the personal
intercession of God into man’s
life in His establishment of the
Mosaic Temple (the Ark). The
author’s thinking progresses to
the Incarnate God, Who replac
es the Mosaic Temple and gives
to us His Church. Beyond these,
the meditation toulhes on pro
phets and mystics as being
Temples in the sense that they
are special vessels of God’s visi
tation. Finally, Father Danielou
considers the Temple which is
in Heaven and which is not yet
open to the living; the empha
sis of this section lies on the
Christian’s life as “an act of
waiting.”
As may be inferred, the title
of the little book derives from
the fact that the essential mean
ing of “Temple” is the presence
of God. This entire meditation
is informed, as are all of Father
Danieiou’s works, with the del
icately lyric sensibility peculiar
to this very fine author.
-O
AUGUSTA — Miss Marian
Catherine Mulherin, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Louis Mulher
in and Mr. Donald Dale Grady
of Decatur, 111., son of the late
Mr. and Mrs. John J. Grady,
were married May 19th at St.
Mary’s-on-the-Hill Church, Rev.
Gerald Armstrong, S.J., offici
ating.
O O
-O
SAVANNAH — Miss Fred-
dye Neele Cross, daughter of
Mrs. Ruth Cross, and Leonard
Lee Kelly, Jr., son of Mr. and
Mrs. Leonard Lee Kelly, Sr. of
Blairsville, Pa., were married ®
May 28th at the Nativity of Our
Lord Church, Rev. Felix Don
nelly officiating.
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Near Old Naval Air Station
Day or Night
in Mesouotamia and became a
monk v/hile a young man. He
attended the Council of Nicaea
in 325 as a deacon. The chief
place of his work was Edessa,
where he taught school and be
came famous for his oratory and
poetry. He died in 378.
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