Newspaper Page Text
PAGE 6—THE BULLETIN, January 7, 1961
A. J. BOHN COMPANY
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RAY’S CLEANERS
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OF AUGUSTA
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AMOS DRUG STORE
"The Biggest Little Drug Store In Town"
(Established 1923)
5 ASHBY, S. W. JA. 2-9533
Atlanta, Ga.
MODERN POWER FARM EQUIPMENT
Established 1904
WIRTZ & HERNLEN
Dealers in Allis-Chalmers Power Farm Equipment
Specializing in All Makes Farm Machinery
Parts & Service
1767 MiJledgeville Road Augusta, Georgia
LIPSCOMB-ELLIS
CO.
REAL ESTATE
90 Fairlie St., S. W.
JA. 1-2162
Atlanta, Ga.
New Year's Greetings
GENE, MARGARET AND
LITTLE GENE GARNER
SKYLAND PHARMACY
PURE DRUGS m PRESCRIPTIONS
SUNDRIES
WE DELIVER
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MARRIAGES
O-
HOLLAND-SULLIVAN
-O
O-
-O
ALBANY — Miss Sarah
Alice Sullivan, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. G. C. Sullivan
of Sale City, and Mr. Robert
Joseph Holland, son of Mrs.
Eleanor May Holland and the
late Ruben S. Holland, of West
Conshohocken, Pa., were mar
ried December 10, at St.
Teresa’s Church, Rev. Marvin
J. LeFrois officiating.
O _o
OSBON-KLING
O-
-O
ALBANY" — Miss Jeffery
Lynn Kling, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Joseph W. Kling of
Albany, and Mr. Carl Law
rence Osbon, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Joe Osbon of Satanta,
Kansas, were married at St.
Teresa’s Church on December
17, Rev. Marvin J. LeFrois
officiating.
O O
I CAFIERO-HEITMANN |
O O
SAVANNAH — Miss Helen
Aline Heitmann, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. John Adolph
Heitmann and Joseph Mose
Cafiero, Jr., son of Mr. and
Mrs. Joseph Mose Cafiero were
married December 17, in the
Chapel of Sacred Heart
Church. The Rev. Timothy
Flaherty, O.S.B., performed
the ceremony.
O O
STEINBECK-CLAY
O-
-O
SAVANNAH — Miss Phyllis
Brownell Clay, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Hunter McGuire
Clay and Klaus Steinbeck, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Fritz Stein
beck of Bonn, Germany were
married December 13, at the
Cathedral of St. John the Bap
tist. The Rev. T. James Mc
Namara officiated at the cere
mony.
YOUTH
(Continued from Page 5)
times; particularly during a
beauty contest.
DRINKING HABIT
Dear Doris:
I have found out through
my association with hoys and
girls that drinking alcoholic
beverages is a big thing now
adays. How do girls get into
the habit of drinking at this
young age?
Jack
Girls develop habits, good
and bad, the same way boys do
—usually through the compa
ny they keep. Those who drink
while still in high school think
it’s smart and think it makes
them appear older. They are
following a set of completely
false standards.
But let me say, Jack, that
most girls don’t get this habit
at an early age. The latest stu
dies and reports show that the
number of high school stu
dents who drink alcoholic bev
erages is very low. If the few
whom you have met already
drink, perhaps, your example
may show them it isn’t neces
sary.
It is true that you can’t be
too careful in your choice of
companions. If others pick up
habits from their friends, you
might too. Try to be selective
—find friends, boys and girls,
who meet your standards.
There are plenty of them.
D oris Revere Peters answers
letters through her column, not
hy mail. Please .do not ask for
a personal reply. Young read
ers are invited to write to her
in care of The Bulletin.
UNDERSTANDING
Tact is the ability to over
look the unreasonableness in
other people’s reasoning.
Pope Will Issue Document To
Commemorate 70th Anniversary
Of Leo Xlll's Labor Encyclical
(Radio, NCWC News Service)
VATICAN CITY—His Holi
ness Pope John XXIII has an
nounced he will issue a docu
ment to commemorate the 70th
anniversary of the publication
of Pope Leo XIII’s encyclical
on labor, “Rerum Novarum.”
Pope John made his an
nouncement at an audience
for diplomats at the Holy See
who had come to extend New
Year’s greetings. The Pope, in
return, extended his greetings
to their countries and to all
the peoples of the world.
Among the diplomats pres
ent were the envoys from three
Latin American countries
where the Church has recently
been under government attack:
the ambassadors of Haiti and
the Dominican Republic and
charge d’affaires of Cuba. Also
attending were the diplomatic
representatives of the Lithu
anian and Polish governments-
in-exile.
The Pope noted that there is
anxiety for peace in the world
and told the diplomats that the
“Church ardently desires this
incomparable benefit of social
and international peace.” He
then revealed “somewhat
ahead of time” his plan to
commemorate “Rerum Novar
um.” He said:
“We propose to celebrate
the 70th anniversary of an
event which was historically of
great importance, the publica
tion (May 15, 1891) of the en
cyclical, ‘Rerum Novarum,’ on
the workers’ problem by Leo
XIII. This is a document judg
ed so important by our imme
diate predecessors, Pius XI and
Pius XII, that they wished to
celebrate respectively the 40th
and 50th anniversaries ...
“We shall therefore promul
gate—to celebrate worthily the
great encyclical of Pope Leo
XIII—a document which will
confirm, by adding Our voice
to those of Our great predeces
sors, the constant concern the
Church has now not only to
ward one part or another of
the social orders, but toward
all together, according to the
needs of the time in which we
live.”
The Pope did not specify the
date his document will be is
sued or the form it will take.
Pope Pius XI issued an en
cyclical, “Quadragesimo An
no,” in 1931 to mark the 40th
anniversary of “Rerum Novar
um,” and Pius XII gave a ra
dio address to celebrate the
50th anniversary in 1941.
In his famous encyclical on
the condition of the working
class, Pope Leo XIII rejected
socialism as a solution to the
workers’ plight. He said that
all men have a right to a liv
ing wage and reasonable com
fort and that they should be
enabled to acquire private
property. He upheld the right
of both workers and employers
to organize and negotiate wage
settlements by free agreement.
He emphasized the duty of the
state to maintain justice and
the responsibility of the
Church in the moral aspects
of employment.
Pope John said the present
time “is not without uncer
tainties or reasons for anxie
ty.” But, he said, he prefers
to concentrate on those things
which “invite confidence and
hope.”
He'recalled his days as Apos
tolic Nuncio to France, when
as dean of the diplomatic corps
in Paris he delivered its tra
ditional New Year’s greetings
to the French President. He
said he had always tried to
find a measure of hope for the
future, no matter what the
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events of the year had been.
He then quoted from the last
address he had given on such
an occasion—New Year’s, 1953
—when he said:
“We follow daily political
events in all countries of the
universe. Sometimes they give
rise in the heart to trust, other
times they generate fear. They
invite us to reflect and to find
in them a teaching that frees
Our spirit from anguish and
the help to prepare better
days . . .
“Every nation has its des
tiny, hidden in the designs of
Providence, and nations should
help each other to realize their
destinies. Preserving a firm
faith, an invincible optimism
and a heart open to the sincere
outpourings of human and
Christian brotherhood, all have
the right not to fear anything
and to have trust in the help of
God.”
The Pope said these senti
ments are even stronger in him
today and added: “We are hap
py to repeat them to you as an
expression of joyful expecta
tion and of the firm hope
which animates all souls of
good will on the threshold of
the new year.”
Federal Education Aid May
Not Foster Class Distinction
LOS ANGELES, (NC)—Fed
eral aid to education may not
be squandered or used to fos
ter class distinctions or dis
crimination, the superintend
ent of the West’s largest pri
vate school system said here.
“Need should be the crite
rion for Federal aid,” declared
Father Joseph F. Sharpe, Los
Angeles archdiocesan superin
tendent of high schools and
colleges.
“Aid indicates need; the
justification for Feredal aid
must be need of an extensive
nature, so extensive that it
cannot be met by local or dis
trict resources,” he said.
Speaking to the executive
board of the Archdiocesan
Council of Catholic Women
here, Father Sharpe said, “if
this aid is given to the chil
dren of a needy area, all the
needy children of that area
should be equitably benefited.
“If the funds are given na
tionally to promote the educa
tional welfare of the people,
then they must be given to all
who are in the educational
process. To act otherwise
would be unjust, a misuse of
the people’s - funds, and would
therefore be discriminatory in
the true sense of that word,”
Father Sharpe maintained.
“The dollars that will be
long to the citizens even after
they are collected by taxes
and deposited in the treasury,”
he said, “cannot be used to
promote a class distinction
-among the citizens and fosteb
discrimination.”
“It cannot be argued,” added
Father Sharpe, “that a child
must be in a school sponsored
by a local public school dis
trict, or in a state or federal
school, to reap benefits of
such aid.”
“It might be said that there
would be room for discussion
on the point if parents did not
have the right to educate their
children apart from schools of
this descriptio n,” Father
Sharpe observed. “It would be
foolhardy to challenge this
right, however, deeply rooted
as it is in the very nature of
parental authority.”
Father Sharpe quoted the
U. S. Supreme Court decision
which reaffirms the right of
parents to educate their chil
dren and “excludes any gen
eral power of the state to
standardize its children by
forcing them to accept instruc
tion from public school
teachers only.”
Father Sharpe said the very
wording of this decision makes
it unlawful to apply Federal
aid to public school pupils and
deny it to others, “for it is
equivalently forcing the child
who is in educational need to
obtain instruction from public
school teachers only.”
“If need is not the reason
for Federal assistance, then
there is some other motive,”
he said. “Is this motive the
belief that education is Fed
eral business — that every
American child should be
taught in the framework of an
imposed curriculum or in a
particular type of building or
by Federally paid instruc
tors?” he asked.
He questioned whether the
rights of the people in regard
to the content of instruction
would be protected in Federal
ly supported education.
“Is it mere theory to sug
gest that ‘thought control’
would not result eventually
from Federal control. At any
rate, the idea is repugnant to
the free citizen in the free
American tradition,” he said.
The superintendent remind
ed the Council women of their
right and duty to oppose any
misuse of tax money. He urged
that their Congressional rep
resentatives be informed of
the discriminatory character
of any Federal aid legislation
which would ignore the rights
of any group of American
children.
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Medal Winner
William D. Tavares of Maui,
Hawaii, has been named to
receive the 1961 Vercelli
Medal by thq National Head
quarters of the Holy Name
Society. Mr. Tavares, 39, the
father of four children, has
served as president of the
Maui Council as well as pres
ident of the diocesan council
of the Holy Name Society.
(NC Photos)
‘Half-Tithing’
WESTPORT, Conn. (NC) —
Strictly speaking it’s not tith
ing, but half of the parishion
ers have been supporting St.
Luke’s parish here by dona
tions of five per cent of their
gross income.
Father Cornelius J. Looney,
pastor, estimated that 500
members of his parish make
the five per cent donations. A
tithe, he pointed out, is one-
tenth. Father Looney said the
contributing parishioners use
an envelope system and make
their donations in the Sunday
collections.
The priest pointed out that
there is only one Sunday col
lection. The parish has never
sponsored a raffle or fund rais
ing event, he said. Though
only three years old, it com
pleted a $250,000 church in
May 1959, and broke ground
for a $250,000 parochial school
last month.
Catholic Mission
Aided By Success
Of Broadway Ploy
NEW YORK (NC) — Cath
olic nuns living under the sha
dowy of Mount Kenya in the
African wilds are praying for
the success of a Broadway
play.
The catalvst in this unlike
ly combination of spirituality
and worldhness is Nora O’-
Mahony, London-born Irish
actress who has pledged 45 per
cent of her salarv from “Little
Moon of Alban” to the Con-
colata Catholic Mission in
Kenya.
Miss O’Mahony, who enacts
Julie Harris’ mother in the
James Costigan play, returned
recently from a year’s service
with the nuns as a lav mis-
sioner. She has promised to re
join the group for two years
after the play completes its
run.
Her work in Nveri, Kenya,
was teaching English to Kiku-
vu girls, Miss O’Mahoney ex
plained.
“The Bishop, the Sisters and
everyone at the Consolata Mis
sion are praying for the suc
cess of ‘Little Moon’,” the act
ress said. “I send them what
ever I can and they need mon
ey very badlv to carry on their
good works.”
Miss O’Mahony explained
that she had gone to Africa
“straight from Hollywood,”
where she had been doing
movies and television.
“I had expected to stay
there three years,” she said.
“The Bishop of the diocese
gave me permission to return
to Broadway.
Miss O’Mahony, 48, carried
out her missionary assignment
under the auspices of the Con
solata Catholic Society for
Foreign Missions, which has
its U. S. headquarters in
Washington, D. C.
“Being back here again is a
shock,” the actress said. “It
was so quiet after dark in Af
rica and here the street noises
are terrific. Now I am saying
novenas for our play, just as
they are saying them for it in
Africa.”
SHRIMP BOAT
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2802 Piedmont Road, N, E. CE. 3-5353
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Augusta Hide Co.
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1433 REYNOLDS STREET, AUGUSTA, GA.
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