Newspaper Page Text
PAGE 2—THE BULLETIN, May 27, 1961
Crenshaw Bicycle
Shop
Schwinn & Dayton Bicycles
New - Rebuilt - Supplies - Repairs
995 Hemphill Ave., N.W.
TR. 6-1744
Atlanta, Ga.
JUHAN'S CLEANERS
Expert - Personalized Service
Given to Every Garment Coming
Into Our Plant
112 N. Main St. PO. 1-4404
College Park, Ga.
Cloudt's Food Shop
1933 Peachtree St., N. E.
TR. 6-7523
Atlanta, Georgia
CATERERS TO ATLANTA
FLOWERLAND
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Retail — Wholesale
Greater Atlanta Deliveries
Flowers for Every Occasion
Chamblee-Dunwoody Rd.
Chamblee, Ga. — GL.7-3455
Guaranteed Passenger and
Truch Tires—Retail, Whole
sale, Fleet—8-Hour Service
on Passenger Cars
MOBLEY TIRE &
RECAP SERVICE
DR. 3-3388 - 2803 E. Ponce De Leon
DECATUR
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Highest Quality Recaps!
ST. LEO
COLLEGE
Preparatory
School
HIGH SCHOOL
FOR BOYS
A BOARDING
GRADES 9 TO 12
• Small Classes
• Unrivalled Study
Conditions
• Unexcelled Outdoor
Sports Facilities
• Private Rooms
For Information, Write
HEADMASTER
Saint Leo College
Preparatory School
Saint Leo, Florida
Latin Dead?
Don’t TelS
Bob Giudice
SACRAMENTO, Calif. (NC)
—If you think Latin is a dead
language, don’t tell Bob Giu
dice.
Bob recently took second-
place honors in a Latin con
test held as part of a language
congress at St. Mary’s College.
What makes his achieve
ment singular is that Bob,
though matched against first
and second year high school
students, is a 10-year-old sixth
grader who has only been stu
dying Latin since September-—
on a twice weekly basis.
Young Bob, the son of Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Giudice of
Sacramento, is enrolled at
Holy Spirit School, conducted
by the Sisters of Mercy. He
has been doing special work in
Several subjects, including
Latin.
SMI-NEL REALTY CO.
Homes Near Pius X High School,
Our Lady of Assumption, Immac
ulate Heart of Mary.
Wm. E. Ham, RU. 9-5880; J. E.
McKeaney, CE. 7-2944
Office, GL. 7-0798
Multi-List Realtors
3665A Clairmont Rd., Chamblee, Ga.
EMILY FINOCCHIO'S
KUT & KURL SHOP
AUDREY, JUNE, NORMA
EMILY
3675 Clairmont Rd. - GL. 7-4580
CHAMBLEE
Green Acres, Inc.
MilledgeviHe, Georgia
GERIACTRIC HOSPITAL
A Home Exclusively for Elders
Monthly Rates $210.00 to $300.00
Brochure and Detailed Information
Available Upon Request
Any Tim© — Anywhere
Call a TAXI
RADIO CABS
DECATUR
CO-OP CABS
310 E. Howard Ave.
24-Hour Service
Passengers Insured
Trips Anywhere
DE. 7-3866 — DE. 7-1701
DECATUR, GA.
Enjoy that
REFRESHING
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you get from Coke!
...a little minute
for a big rest
BOTTLED UNDER AUTHORITY OF THE COCA-COLA COMPANY BY COCA-COLA BOTTLERS OF GEORGIA
A. J. BOHN COMPANY
Brick, Building Tile, Spectra Glaze Concrete Blocks
CEdar 7-6461, Atlanta, Ga., 3229 Cains Hill Place. N. W.
an
The/Moving Man, Inc.
643 10th St., N.W.
Atlanta 18, Ga.
TR. 5-7781
AGENTS
World Wide Movers
CONTAINERIZED STORAGE FOR HOUSEHOLD
GOODS — TRADE SHOWS, EXHIBITS, PACKING,
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GALILEE PRIEST OFFERS LITURGY IN U. S. — Father Elias Denissoff, honor
ary protopresbyter of the Church of the Annunciation at Nazareth, Galilee, in Israel, is
shown standing at the lecturn during a solemn celebration of the Liturgy (Mass) of St.
John Chrysostom offered at the Capuchin Seminary of St. Mary, Crown Point, Ind.
During the solemn Liturgy, sung in three Eastern Rite languages, choirs from several
midwest Eastern Rite parishes alternated in singing responses and hymns in ancient Ro
manian, Ruthenian, Ukrainian, and Russian tongues. Celebrations with Archimandrite
Denissoff are (in background) Father Hermes Kreilkamp, O.F.M. Cap., (left) of the
seminary, and Father Martin Horak, O.S.B., of St. Procopius Abbey, Lisle, Ill., an Ameri
can center for reunion of churches.—(NC Photos)
Priest Who Brought Nestorian
Group Into Church Says Pope’s
Call For Unity Played Key Role
(N.C.W.C. News Service)
CHICAGO — A Chaldean
Rite priest who brought 40
Nestorian Assyrian families
and their pastor into the
Church said the Pope’s call
for Christian Unity played the
key role in their acceptance of
the Faith.
Father Thomas M. Bidawid,
pastor of St. Ephrem’s Chal
dean Rite church here, receiv
ed the separated Christians
into the Church in the Chal
dean Rite in Sacred Heart
Church, Turlock, California.
Father Eshai S. Joseph, pas
tor of the Nestorian Assyrians,
said in a letter to Father Bid
awid in late January that he
and his congregation would
like to be received into the
Church.
Father Bidawid went to Tur
lock in February and taught
Christian doctrine to the Nes-
torians every evening for a
month.
The Chicago pastor said Fa- y
ther Joseph told him: “His
Holiness Pope John XXIII has
expressed such a fatherly in
terest in those outside the
Church that we want to an
swer his paternal call. We feel
that this is the right path lead
ing to the true Church.”
Nestorians get their name
from Nestorius, Bishop of Con-
staninople who died in 451.
Nestorians held that in Christ
there are two persons as well
as two natures, and that Our
Lady is therefore only the mo
ther of the human Christ. This
doctrine was condemned by
the Council of Ephesus in 431.
And by the Council of Chal-
cedon in 451.
Some Syrians refused to ac
cept the decision and left the
Church, fleeing to the Per
sian Empire. From there they
spread their Nestorian form of
Christianity to China and In
dia. Nestorians who returned
to the Church in Syria make
up what is now called the
Chaldean Rite.
In this rite the Mass is of
fered in Aramaic. There are
about 210,000 Chaldean Rite
Catholics, including some 1,800
in the U. S. Their chief bishop,
Patriarch Paul II Cheikho of
Babylon, lives in Baghdad,
Iraq. Chaldean Catholics have
three parishes in the U. S.; two
in Chicago and one in Detroit.
The Detroit parish, Mother of
God, was founded in 1948 by
Father Bidawid.
Protestants Aid
Welsh Convent
HOLYWELL, Wales (NC)—
Two prominent Holywell
Protestants presented the final
installment of a $14,000-fund
they launched to help local
Little Sisters of the Assump
tion clear the debt on their
convent.
Impressed by the nuns’ work
for the sick poor they decided
that Nonconfromists in the
town were not going to be
outdone in Christian charity
The drive was begun eight
years ago by T. N. Griffiths,
then chairman of the Holywell
Urban District Council, and
Albert S. Jones, director of
a transportation firm. They
presented the final installment
of $4,200 to TV star Eamonn
Andrews, who is a cousin of
the Sister superior at Holy-
well, Mother St. John.
Civil War Bishop’s Diary
Discloses He Pioneered In
Forcing, Corps Of Chaplains
BUFFALO, N. Y., (NC) —
The diary of the first Catholic
Bishop of Buffalo disclosed he
was instrumental during the
Civil War in getting establish
ed the forerunner of the pres
ent armed forces chaplains
corps.
Bishop John Timon, C.M.,
who headed the Buffalo dio
cese from 1847 to 1867 record
ed in his diary that he made
a number of trips to Washing
ton and consulted with Presi
dent Lincoln, Secretary of
State William H. Seward, Sec
retary of War Edwin M. Stan
ton and Secretary of Treasury
Salmon P. Chase.
One of the Bishop’s chief in
terests, according to the diary,
was getting legislation which
would permit priests and min-
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GRADUATION — IDENTIFICATION
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DRESS FORMAL...THE MODERN WAY<
Full Hn« of handsome Forma! Wear 1^1
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Bridal Gowns, Bridesmaid Dresses
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Select the correct attire for that
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0’JtJLm
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231 Mitchell Street, S.W., JA 2-9960
[Eifablijhed 19*19'
CPA President Appeals To
Congress To Reject Proposed
Mail Rate Increases On Press
isters to serve in the Army as
chaplains. At that time,
clergymen were subject to the
draft and service with the
fighting forces.
The legislation subsequently
was approved and later was
amended to include clergymen
of the Jewish faith.
Although he took his stand
on the side of the Union, Bish
op Timon on a number of oc
casions displayed his concern
for Confederate troops, his
diary records. An entry of
June 2, 1864, stated that he
visited Secretary Seward to
find some means of getting
$500 donated by Pope Pius IX
into the hands of the Con
federacy to be used in behalf
of the Rebel wounded. The
Pope also donated a like
amount to the Union.
At Secretary Seward’s sug
gestion, the money was turn
ed over to Dorothea Dix, su
perintendent of Union nurses
who got it to the Confederate
authorities.
The diary also noted Bishop
Timon’s concern for Rebel
prisoners of war who were
held at Elmira, N. Y., some
times call “the Andersonville
of the North.” He visited the
10,000 Confederate prisoners at
Elmira, assigned priests to
look after the spiritual wel
fare of Catholics among them
and on one occasion spent $100
to obtain books for them.
(N.C.W.C. NEWS SERVICE)
WASHINGTON — The presi
dent of the Catholic Press As
sociation appealed to Congress
to save the religious press
from “disastrous” postal rate
increases.
Father Albert R .J. Nevins,
M.M., said that if Postmaster
General J. Edward Day’s pro
posed increases are adopted,
the result “will either destroy,
curtal or inflict a heavy bur
den.”
He said that while to some
the proposed rise “may appear
insignificant,” in the case of
his own monthly magazine,
Maryknoll, it would mean an
increase of $33,000 annually,
and “for many of our publica
tions poses a question of sur
vival.”
Father Nevins said he peti
tioned “this committee and
this Congress to continue to
recognize the traditional im
portance of our religious press
to the national welfare, and to
recognize the service this press
makes possible to developing
peoples abroad, such service
supplementing our national
policy at no cost to Govern
ment or to our citizens in
taxes.”
Father Nevins made his re
marks in testimony prepared
for delivery before the House
Post Office and Civil Service
Committee. The committee
chairman, Rep. Tom Murray of
Tennessee, has introduced the
postal rate bill (H. R. 6418) for
the administration.
Officials of Protestant and
Jewish publications joined in
testimony against the measure.
Dr. Daniel A. Poling, editor,
and Ford Stewart, publisher
of the -Christian Herald, an
undenominational Protestant
magazine in New York, testi
fied. So did Edward E. Grusd,
editor of the National Jewish
Monthly and other representa
tives of Protestant publica
tions.
William Holuh, general man
ager of America Press, New
York, and chairman of the
CPA’s postal rate committee,
testified on the effects of the
rate increases. James A. Doyle,
executive secretary of the
CPA headquarters in New
York, attended the session.
The measure, calling for
across - the - board increases,
would raise the minimum per
piece rate for religious and
nonprofit publications, such as
diocesan newspapers.
The minimum rate would be
increased by one-quarter of a
penny from the present rate
of one and one-half cents per
pound.
In addition, the bill would
raise the minimum per piece
rate of third class mail sent
by nonprofit groups. It would
go from one and one-quarter
of a cent to one and three-
quarters.
Such third class mail is
frequently used by religious
organizations to distribute ap
peals. Its rate was increased
by Congress in July, 1960,
when it went up from a one
cent minimum.
The third class rate for non.
profit groups is based on a
formula which makes the rate
equal 50 per cent of the gen
eral third class charge.
Father Nevins asked the
committee to abolish this
“dangerous” 50 per cent form
ula. “It is always a threat be
cause of possible translation
to second-class nonprofit pub
lication mailing,” he said.
The Maryknoller, whose as
sociation represents 131 news
papers and 444 magazines with
a circulation over 25 million,
said the religious press is a
main bulwark against moral
evils threatening America’s
foundations.
“Therefore, anything that
limits and handicaps the work
of this press is detrimental to
the welfare of our government
and of the American people
as a whole,” he said.
Religious publications, he
said, represent a cause and not
an economic investment. “All
of our publications financially
operate either on the most
|OUB LADY Or THE HILLS |
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A Catholic camp for hoys and girls ages
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Father Charles McLaughlin
OUR LADY OF THE HILLS GAMP
HENDERSONVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA
narrow of margins or at a de
ficit made up by the sponsor
ing organization. The proposed
increases will have the great
est effect on those least able
to afford them.”
“I am certain,” he added,
“that it is not the intention
of the committee to destroy
any religious publication, par
ticularly at this time when our
nation has need of greater
moral strength than at any
other period in its history.”
“While the Catholic Press
Association appreciates the ar
gument of the Post Office,”
Father Nevins told the com
mittee, “we cannot agree with
the implication that every gov
ernment department should
pay its own way. The Consti
tution reminds us that our
Government was founded to
‘promote the general welfare.’
For this reason, the Public
Health Service gives treat
ments without cost, the Agri
culture Department serves the
farmer without recompense,
the Federal Aviation Agency
makes no charge for its ex
tensive services to the air
man.
“We recognize that where
profit is made on the mail,
adequate compensation should
be returned to the Govern
ment.
“We are not questioning the
proposed increase in first-class
mail, even though it does
place a strain upon us. But
we dochallenge theimplied s-
sumption that the general wel
fare of our people will be serv
ed by lessening the effective
ness of thenon-profit press.
“And we do hope that this
committe will give ultimate
determination to the fact that
the Post Office is a service of
the people, for the people, and
not a federal business.”
Unlike airline pilots, drivers
can’t fly blindly, warns E. R.
Klamm, accident prevention
director of Allstate Insurance
Companies. The best “instru
ments” drivers have are their
senses, whihe need clear heads
and clear windshields to func
tion properly.
JOHN MARSHALL
LAW SCHOOL
JUNIOR COLLEGE
105 Forresi
Ave., N. E.
JA. 3-8580
“Around the Corner from
Sacred Heart Church”
Day And Evening Classes
4
%
sjunoooV
Postage
On Mail
We Pay
Insured
to
$10,000
by
FSLIC
Current Rale on Savings
Standard Federal
48 Broad St. NW.
Atlanta 3 Georgia
MU. 8-6619
Italian Restaurant
Spring at North Ave., N.W.
TR. 6-9666
10:30 A. M. ’til Midnight
PHONE JA. 2-6500
*89 FORREST RD., N.E.
ATLANTA 12, GA.
dale's
CELLAR RESTAURANT
PEACHTREE AND IVY STREETS
CHARCOAL BROILED STEAK
CHICKEN — SEAFOOD
Hours: 11 a. m.-ll p. m.. Luncheon through Dinner
VISIT BEAUTIFUL DALE'S COFFEE HOUSE
Lobby Imperial Hotel 6 a. m. « 10 p. m.
de Give Construction Co., Inc.
Larry de Give, President
Engineers, Contractors and Developers
1478 Mecaslin Street, N. W.
Atlanta 9, Georgia
Prepare Anil Serve
WONDERFUL MEALS IN MINUTES.'
BROOKHAVEN SHOE STORE
“CORRECT FIT AND SATISFACTION ASSURED”
Next to Woolworth's
"Home of Red Goose Shoes"
Shoe Headquarters in Brookhaven