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CLAIRMONT
PHARMACY
Have Your Doctor Call Us or We
Will Send for Your Prescription
— PROMPT DELIVERY —
3668 ClAirmont Rd. — GL. 7-4482
Chamblee, Ga.
BARBETTE'S
HOUSE OF BEAUTY
Permanents from $10 to $25
Shampoo from $2.50 to $3
Haircuts at $2.00
Pine Tree Plaza Shopping Center
Buford Hwy.
457-0582 - Doraville, Georgia
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JIM ALDREDGE
Says
REGISTER
NOW
TO VOTE
In The City Primary
September 13
MOTHER SETON’S GRANDSONS
Two grandsons of Mother Elizabeth Bayley Seton, foundress
of the American branch of the Sisters of Charity, served
with distinction in the Union Army during the Civil War.
Their father, Captain William Seton, served in the U. S.
Navy from 1817-34. Major Henry Seton (left) served not
only in the Civil War, as a Captain in 54th N. Y. Infantry
Regiment, but served in the regular Army, in the Spanish.
American War, in Cuba, and the Philippines and was a
noted Indian fighter with General Crook. William Seton
(right), became a Captain in the Fourth N. Y. Regiment of
U. S. Volunteers in the Civil War and was twice wounded in
the battle of Antietam. He later gained prominence in lit
erary pursuits. (NC Photos)
War Service Of Nuns
To Be Commemorated
By Hospital Association
ST. LOUIS, Mo., (NC) —
The work of the Sister-nurses
during the American Civil
War will be commemorated
here during the 46th annual
convention of the Catholic
Hospital Association of the
U. S. and Canada. Fifteen mo
thers general, superiors and
provincial superiors will re
ceive testimonial plaques for
their religious orders, at a din
ner on June 14.
The Sisters represent Orders
which have been recognized
by the U. S. Government for
their work in caring for the
sick and wounded of the North
and South, in hospitals, hos
pital ship and on the battle
fields. A monument in their
memory was presented to the
Government, erected in Wash
ington, D. C., near St. Mat
thew’s Cathedral.
Of the 2,000 women who
served as nurses in the Civil
War, more than one-third were
members of Catholic sister
hoods. The Sisters were the
only group of trained nurses
available when the war start
ed, and were quick to volun
teer their services, often work
ing under heartbreaking con
ditions. Ordinary supplies were
scarce, medicines were at a
premium and often they had
to beg for food for their
charges. Not only did they
tend the sick in the hospitals
and makeshift refuges, they
went out into the battlefields
to help bring the wounded to
safety, in farm wagons requi
sitioned as ambulances.
The Sister-nurses not only
helped the soldiers and sail
ors of the Civil War, they also
cared for the sick and wound
ed civilians, the homeless and
orphans. Some of the Sisters
died of fever, overwork, hun
ger and exposure to the cold.
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Highest Quality Recaps!
A. J. BOHN COMPANY
Brick, Building Tile, Spectra Glaze Concrete Blocks
CEdar 7-8461, 3272 Peachtree Road, Atlanta 5, Ga.
winter or summer,
the flavor never varies
LAND O' LAKES Z,Z BUTTER
BROHDVIED) KIDDIE LDDD
Rides! Birthday House for Parties!
New Children's Merry-Go-Round
Open Day, Night and Sunday!
2531 Piedmont Rd. TR. 2-3567
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Home Designs of Distinction
BUCKHEAD HOME PLAN SERVICE
3182 Peachtree Rd., N. E., Atlanta, Ga. CE. 7-0432
CUSTOM DESIGN — STOCK PLANS
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Upholstery - Fabrics - Slipcovers - Drapery
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
• We Pick Up and Deliver
BROOKHAVEN SHOE STORE
“CORRECT FIT AND SATISFACTION ASSURED”
Next to Woolworth's
"Home of Red Goose Shoes"
Shoe Headquarters in Brookhaven
PATTERSON FURNITURE CO.
“Quality Furniture at Lower Prices’’
3950 Buford Hwy,
Opp. Skyland Shopping Center
Browse through our beautiful
borne furnishings.
Early American - Traditional -
Contemporary
Open every night til 9,
Except Saturday
ME. 6-7852
Appliances - Television
NORTH DeKALB BANKING FOR YOU
FULL-SERVICE BANKING:
Drive-in windows
Spacious lobby
Commercial checking
Regular checking
Special checking
"No Passbook" savings
Business loans
Personal loans
Line of credit
Safe Deposit boxes
"Sleadi-Save" Automatic Savings
DeKalb National Bank
4021 Peachtree Road Member FDIC
Trust Company of Georgia Group
H. M. Patterson And Son Opens
New Branch On Cascade Road
ATLANTA — In another
big move to bring their facil
ities closer to the population
of this expanding City, H. M.
Patterson & Son have an
nounced the completion of
Cascade Hill, and plans for its
dedication at 3 p. m., Sunday,
June 11th. Public inspection
will begin at 4, and continue
through the following Sunday,
June 18, from 4 to 9 daily.
The new facility, third in the
Patterson group, is located at
Cascade Road and Utoy
Springs Road, SW.
Patterson is the oldest fu
neral directing firm in the At
lanta area, having been found
ed in 1881 by the father of the
present Fred Patterson.. Just
last February they dedicated
the building, identical in plan
and services at 4520 Peachtree
Road, known as Oglethorpe
Hill. Both of these buildings
duplicate in plan the long-
established central building,
Spring Hill.
The new building, con
structed at a cost in excess of
$300,000, has similar floor plan
and appointments to the
Spring Hill facility, with 52
rooms, a chapel which seats
200 on the main floor and 150
more in the wings. It is Greek
Revival in architecture, de
signed by Ivey & Crook archi.
tects; Mion Construction Com
pany were general contractors.
The furnishings were done by
Nancy Downing, interior dec
orator. The decorations are
similar to those in a fine home,
and appropriate to the style
of the structure itself.
The facility has reception
rooms, state rooms, display
rooms, preparation rooms and
business offices. It provides off
street parking for 250 cars and
separate garage facilities for
10 pieces of equipment. Gar
dens, for which the Patterson
establishments are well known
are in place, to beautify ex
tensive grounds.
As in the case with Ogle
thorpe Hill, the new facility
is staffed by experienced per
sonnel, all Patterson-trained
and capable of rendering the
same high type of service as
the main facility, Spring Hill.
With the completion of Cas
cade Hill, Patterson’s have
reached their current expan
sion program, and have
brought typical Patterson
service to the area North of
Atlanta and to the Southwest
ern section, as well as to the
central, mid-town section,
Spring Hill, which has served
at this point for thirty years.
The Patterson organization,
beginning in 1881, has expand
ed facilities a number of times,
each move directed toward
better arrangements, more
pleasant surroundings and
greater convenience for fam
ily and friends.
Frederic W. Patterson is
President; Brannon Lesesne is
general manager, secretary
and treasurer. Ben F. Noble,
who has had charge of the
lovely Spring Hill gardens for
15 years, and of Oglethorpe
Hill gardens since its incep
tion, is also responsible for
similar gardens at Cascade
Hill. Experienced, long-time
Paterson associates, Daniel J.
Allen and Lee Borders will be
co-managers of the new Cas
cade Hill.
FIRST NEGRO CARDINAL
PRESIDES AT MASS IN
NEW YORK CATHEDRAL
NEW YORK (NC) — The
Church’s first Negro cardinal
presided at Solemn Mass in St.
Patrick’s cathedral here in a
ceremony described as a “liv
ing symbol” of the Church’s
universality.
Laurian Cardinal Rugam-
bwa, Bishop of Rutabo, Tan
ganyika, presided at the Mass
(May 28) at the invitation of
Francis Cardinal Spellman,
Archbishop of New York.
Cardinal Rugambwa is in
the United States on a three-
week visit that will include
trips to Chicago, Washington
and Boston.
Father Bernard P. Donachie,
welcoming the Cardinal, de
scribed the ceremony as a “liv
ing symbol of the universality
of the Roman Catholic Church”
in accord with Christ’s com
mand to the Apostles to “go
into the world and preach to
all ngftions.”
Father Donachie declared
that “the future of the Catho
lic Church, in great measure,
depends on these new nations
of Africa.”
He promised Cardinal Ru
gambwa the prayers of Amer-
Venetian Country Club
4 Pools — Golf (Driving, Puffing)
Picnic Area for Parties
Scoff Boulevard, 1 block off Ponce de Leon, Decatur
A Private Club (Restricted) — Limited Membership
Initiation Fee $2.00 Single, $5.00 Family
Dues: Pay As You Go
"SWIM IN DRINKING WATER"
COME SEE — INSPECTION INVITED
ican Catholics “in the difficult
task of spreading the Kingdom
of God throughout the great
continent of Africa.”
The Cardinal greeted several
hundred persons outside the
cathedral after Mass. In reply
to newsmen’s questions he
stressed that the education of
youth is essential to the con
tinued progress of the Church
in Africa.
Later the same day he made
a trip to Metuchen, N. J., to
visit houses of the White Fa
thers and White Sisters. The
Cardinal studied at the White
Fathers’ seminary in Rubya,
Tanganyika, and was ordained
a priest at their major semi
nary in Katigondo, Uganda, in
December, 1943.
Cardinal Rugambwa, 48, was
born July 14, 1912, of pagan
parents, who later entered the
Church. He was baptized a
Catholic in 1920. He has been
Bishop of Rutabo since 1953
and became a cardinal in
March, 1960.
Plight Of
Baltic States
Seen As Warning
CHICAGO (NC) — The
plight of the Baltic states
should be a warning to un
committed nations flirting with
communism, a Lithuanian-
American leader said here.
This point was made by
Leonard Simutis, editor of the
Draugas, Lithuanian Catholic
daily published here.
Mr. Simutis, 68, was honored
(May 28) in a ceremony at
the Lithuanian Youth Center
for a half-century of leader
ship among Lithuanian-Amer-
icans. He is national president
of the American Lithuanian
Council and the Lithuanian
Roman Catholic Alliance of
America.
Mr. Simutis said in an inter
view that “the Baltic states
were seized forceibly by the
Soviets and are ruled by the
Red army.”
“Let Cuba, South America
and Africa take a look at the
plight of the Baltic states, and
they’ll stop flirting with com
munism,” he declared.
Stopping distance will al
ways lengthen after you’ve
driven over the crest of a hill
even if you don’t increase
speed, the Allstate Safety Cru
sade explains.
Some were buried with mili
tary honors, other died as
humbly as they lived, un
known and unrecorded.
The plaques to be presented
by the Catholic Hospital As
sociation will go to the follow
ing religious orders: Daugh
ters of Charity, Emmitsburg,
Md.; Sisters of Charity of Cin
cinnati, Mt. St. Joseph, Ohio;
Sisters of Charity of St. Vin
cent de Paul, New York; Sis
ters of Charity of Nazareth,
Nazareth, Ky.; Sisters of St.
Dominic, St. Catherine, Ky.;
Sisters of St. Joseph, Chestnut
Hill, Philadelphia; Sisters of
Mercy, Pittsburgh; Sisters of
Charity of Our Lady of Mercy,
Charleston, S. C.; Sisters of
Our Lady of Mt. Carmel, New
Orleans, La.; Sisters of Divine
Providence, St. Mary of the
Woods, Ind.; Sisters of Mercy
of the Union, Washington,
D. C., and Sisters of the Poor
of St. Francis, Cincinnati,
Ohio.
Court Action
To Cost ScM
Over $20,000
BURLINGTON, Vt., (NC) —
A recent action by the U. S.
Supreme Court will cost a
Catholic high school here $20,-
475 this semester.
That is the amount of tui
tion at Rice Memorial High
School for students whose bills
previously were paid by pub
lic school districts under a pro
gram which has been ruled
unconstitutional.
Father Raymond A. Adams,
principal of the school, said
second semester tuition bills
for $112.50 will not be sent
to 182 students from towns
without their own high
schools.
Previously, public school
districts without high schools
could pay the tuition costs of
students who had to attend
school elsewhere. But this pro
gram was held to be uncon
stitutional by th<? state su
preme court, and the U. S.
Supreme Court on May 15 re
fused to review this ruling.
At Mount St. Mary Acade
my here Sister Mary Martha,
principal, said the school has
26 students from towns with
out high schools.
Tuition bills were sent out
to their public school districts
before the Supreme Court’s
action, she said. She added
that parents of the students
had offered to pay the tuition
bills if the public school dis
tricts were not permitted to do
so.
The court case which result
ed in overturning the tuition
payment program originated
in South Burlington, Vt. A
Protestant taxpayer there
challenged the program on the
grounds that his tax money
was being used unconstitu
tionally for support of sec
tarian education.
BALM
Next to being shot at and
missed — nothing is more grat
ifying than an income tax re
fund.
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402 E. Howard Ave. Decatur
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TR. 6-9666
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THE BULLETIN, June 10, 1961—PAGE 2
Georgians
Receive Degrees
At Belmont
BELMONT — Two students
from Georgia are among the
66 students who graduated
at the 83rd Commencement
exercises at Belmont Abbey
College, Belmont, N. C., held
on Tuesday, June 6th, in Haid
Gymnasium on the college
campus.
David Joseph Bohorfoush,
son of Dr. J. G. Bohorfoush
of Milledgeville, received
the Bachelor of Arts degree,
having majored in History
with a minor in Education.
He plans a teaching career.
William B. Daniel, who com
pleted his course work in Jan
uary, received the Bachelor
of Arts degree, majoring in
Business Administration with
a minor in History. He is the
son of Mrs. F. F. Athearn of
Augusta.
EMILY FINOCCHIO'S
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AUDREY, JUNE, NORMA
EMILY
3675 Clairmont Rd. - GL. 7-4580
CHAMBLEE
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Hours: II 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
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