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OBITUARIES
Mrs. E. T. O'Leary
AUGUSTA — Funeral serv
ices for Mrs. Barbara A. O’
Leary were held January 13th
at St. Mary ’s-on-the-Hill
Church, Rt. Rev. Msgr. offici
ating.
Survivors are her husband,
Edward T. O’Leary of Augus
ta; one daughter, Barbara Jean
O’Leary of Augusta; two sons,
Richard James (Ricky) O’Lea
ry and William John (Billy)
O’Leary, both of Augusta; her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. E. Rich
ard Zschieshe of Florence,
Mass.; and three sisters, Mrs.
Louise Shipley of Cleveland,
Ohio, Mrs. Gertrude Cartledge
of East Hampton, Mass., and
Mrs. Elizabeth Johnson of
Lexington, Mass.
Mrs. Catherine
Barth
AUGUSTA — Funeral serv
ices for Mrs. Catherine Black-
burne Barth were held Janu
ary 17th at Chapel No. 10, Ft.
Gordon, Rev. Francis X. Roque
officiating.
Mrs. Barth was a native of
New York City, but had re
sided in Augusta two years.
Survivors are one son,
George W. Pierce of Augusta.
Mr. Fred H. Roberts
JACKSON, Miss. — Funeral
services for Mr. Fred H. Rob
erts, retired railroad conductor
and former long-time resident
of Augusta, were held January
20th with a requiem mass at
St. Theresa Church.
Survivors are his wife, the
former Stella Coffey of Sav
annah; two sons, Lt. Thomas
M. Roberts, U. S. Navy, Nor
folk, Va., and Fred J. Roberts,
Jackson, Miss.; two daughters,
Mrs. J. W. Murs, Jr. and Mrs.
D. J. McGill, both of Miami,
Fla.; two brothers, Henry C.
Roberts of Sanford, N. C. and
Way Ion Roberts of Wilming
ton, N. C.; two sisters, Mrs.
Oscar Musselwhite of Lumber-
ton, N. C., and Mrs. Martha
Ravinbach of Wilmington,
N. C., and 10 grandchildren.
Mrs. Antonia
K. Benchina
DUBLIN — Funeral services
for Mrs. Antonia K. Benchina
were held December 29th at
the Immaculate Conception
Church.
Mrs. Benchina was past
president of the Altar Society
and a member of the Parish
Council of Catholic Women.
Survivors are two daughters,
Miss Sophia Benchina, of Dub
lin and Mrs. Joseph P. Sercer
of Iindianapolis, Ind.; two
sons, Ernest Benchina of In
dianapolis, and Louis Benchi
na, Jr., of Miami, Fla.; one
grandson, Paul J. Sercer of
Indianapolis, Ind., four great
grandchildren, Michael P. Ser
cer, Valerie Sercer, Scott Ser
cer and Christopher Sercer, of
Indianapolis, Ind. and one bro
ther, John Kosmerl, of Trieste,
Italy.
Michael Joseph
Deraney
GRIFFIN — Funeral serv
ices for Michael Joseph Dera
ney were held January 12th at
the Sacred Heart Church, Rev.
Raymond Govern, C.S.S.R.,
and Rev. Joseph Abi-Nader of
ficiating.
Survivors are his wife, Mrs.
Abbie Tahan Deraney; daugh
ters, Mrs. Joseph Ashouti, At
lanta; Mrs. Joseph Abdalla,
Vinson, N. C., Mrs. Taft Ekou-
rie, Birmingham, Ala. and Mrs.
Joseph Mansour, Griffin; sons,
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Michael Joseph Deraney, Jr.,
Griffin and Joseph Deraney,
Barnesville; sister, Miss Mary
Deraney, Cuba, and 21 grand
children.
W. A. Hernandez
SAVANNAH — Funeral
services for William A. Her
nandez were held January
24th at the Sacred Heart
Church.
Survivors are his wife, Mrs.
Idell Hewitt Hernandez; a
daughter, Mrs. Edna Hernan
dez Crowl; three sons, William
T. Hernandez, Jacksonville,
Fla., Henry H. Hernandez,
Charleston, and Fred C. Her
nandez, Savannah; a step
daughter, Mrs. Basil C. Smith;
a stepson, James F. Wiggins,
Jr., two grandchildren and one
great-grandchild.
John E. Keating
SAVANNAH — Funeral
services for John Eugene Keat
ing, Sr., were held January
19th at the Sacred Heart
Church.
Survivors are his wife, Mrs.
Lucy Martin Keating; a son,
John E. Keating, Jr.; daugh
ter, Mrs. Herman Cobb, Jr., of
Atlanta, three brothers, Pat
rick J. Keating of Charleston,
S. C., James Michael Keating
of Savannah and Paul P. Keat
ing of Orlando, Fla.; two sis
ters, Mrs. Thomas J. O’Brien
of Savannah and Mrs. Alfred
P. Mew of Bluffton, and a
granddaughter.
Mrs. Agnes Lears
SAVANNAH — Funeral
services for Mrs. Agnes Weber
Lears were held January 20th
at the Cathedral of St. John
the Baptist.
Survivors are two daugh
ters, Mrs. Irene Roddy, Jack
sonville, Fla., and Mrs. Helen
Aldret of Savannah, a grand
daughter, and a great-grand
child.
Mrs. Stella Lyons
SAVANNAH — Funeral
services for Mrs. Stella Hohen-
stein Lyons were held January
18th at the Cathedral of St.
John the Baptist.
Survivors are a daughter,
Mrs. F. C. Crider, Arlington,
Texas; two sons, Charles
Lyons, New Orleans, La., and
John Lyons, Savannah, a sis
ter, Miss Mary Hohenstein,
Savannah; two brothers, Wal
ter Hohenstein, Jackson
Heights, N. Y. and Leo Hohen
stein, Houston, Texas and 15
grandchildren.
Mrs. Louise O'Brien
SAVANNAH — Funeral
services for Mrs. Marie O’
Brien were held January 22nd
in the chapel of the Little Sis
ters of the Poor.
She was a native of Augusta.
She is survived by one niece.
Frank J. Carr
SAVANNAH — Funeral
services for Frank J. Carr
were held January 16th at the
chapel of the Little Sisters of
the Poor.
Survivors and one sister,
Catherine C. Mulligan, one
nephew and several cousins.
Julius B. Schultz
SAVANNAH — Funeral
services for Julius B. Schultz
were held January 24th at the
Sacred Heart Church.
Survivors are two sons, J. C.
Schultz an d Richard E.
Schultz, and a grandson.
Antonio Natalitano
GRIFFIN — Funeral serv
ices for Mr. Antonio Natalitano
were held January 13th at the
Sacred Heart Church.
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OH! A DOLLY
At a special Epiphany party given at Sacred Heart Ca
thedral, Dallas, for Cuban refugees, this little girl, one of 18
children from 14 Cuban families, spots a prized object—a
doll. In December, the Catholic Cuban Committee of Dallas
distributed winter clothing to the 14 Cuban families with
the aid of Auxiliary Bishop Augustine Danglmayr and sev
eral Catholic families in the diocese.—(NC Photos).
Nurse, 21, To Serve Three
Years As A Lay Missionary
BURLINGTON, Vt., (NC)—Martha Gabbeitt, an
attractive 21-year-old blonde, took the advice of the
late Dr. Tom Dooley and now is going to realize a long
time ambition. She’s going to the South Africa bush
country as a lay missionary.
Miss Gabbeitt recalled that when she was in the
lower grades of grammar school she hoarded pennies
to “buy” pagan children in China. When she reached 13
she was an avid reader of the exploits of missionaries
in Africa and China.
THE BULLETIN, February 3, 1962—PAGE 3
Later she corresponded with
Dr. Dooley, the famed “jungle
doctor of Laos,” who advised
her; “Get your R.N. first, then
come on over. We need help.”
So she studied and got her
R.N. from St. Mary’s Hospital
in Montreal.
Miss Gabbeitt has been ac
cepted to serve as the fourth
lay missioner under Bishop
John Bokenfohr, O.M.I., in his
Diocese of Kimberley, South
Africa. She will serve three
years as a nurse there.
Although she is engaged to
marry a Montreal accountant,
she said the thought of three
years in South Africa might be
“like the end of the world to
most girls; but for me it’s just
the beginning.”
“Some people can’t under
stand why I want to go to
South Africa,” she said. “I
know there are sick people
here, too, but at least in
America help is available. In
Archbishop Heenan was
writing on “Catholics and the
Dialogue” in the January issue
of the Clergy Review. The pre
late, who heads the English
Hierarchy’s committee on
Christian unity, asserted:
“The more we come to know
ministers of other religions the
more likely we are to admire
them. It is, after all, not their
fault that they do not share
our beliefs.”
“It would be intolerable if
we were to accuse them of
bad faith. We see the self-
sacrifice many of them show
in their ministry. No doubt
there are lazy persons as there
are lazy priests. But the ave
rage Protestant clergyman of
ten lives more frugally than
ourselves . . .”
“In an age when the friends
of Christ are few and His ene
mies are glorifying in their
conquests, it is reasonable to
rejoice at the growth of love
and understanding among
Christians.”
In another statement made
public here on the eve of the
Christian Unity Octave, Fa
ther Edward Duff, S.J., of St.
Louis, Mo., one of the five of
ficial Catholic observers at the
recent assembly of the World
Council of Churches in New
Delhi, listed six major obsta
cles to effective talks on Chris
tian reunion.
At the same time, it was an
nounced that the Catholic
Hierarchy has asked two lead
ing theologians, Msgr. H.
Francis Davis of Birmingham
some of the remote areas over
there they’ve never even heard
of hospitals and clinics.
“I’m not going because I pity
the people,” she continued.
“I’m going because I’d like to
help them to help themselves.
Some don’t even know how to
wash themselves or clean
sores. They need to be vacci
nated against diseases. The
women should be educated
about childbirth.”
Miss Gabbiett has worked in
the operating room at DeGoes-
briand Hospital here since last
August. She will receive no
pay while serving as a nurse
in South Africa and will take
a vow of poverty, she said.
“I want this to give a good
example spiritually, too,” the
nurse said. “By doing this we
sanctify the profession—show
people that not only religious
workers go to backward coun
tries but also people who have
good professions at home.”
and Father Bernard Leeming,
S.J., of Heythrop College, to
serve as observers at the meet
ing here in March of the Brit
ish Council of Churches.
Father Duff, director of the
Institute of Social Order in St.
Louis, was interviewed by the
Catholic Herald here during
a flying visit to London to re
cord a television program on
religious tolerance.
The American Jesuit said
the main difficulties appear to
be:
1. A danger that in their ea
gerness to unite, immature
churches might try to over-
c o m e theological problems
simply by pettisoning them al
together. This would only
deepen error.
2. Lack of agreement on the
nature of the “Church.”
3. The power of Anglo-
Saxon Protestantism in the
World Council.
4. The lack of interest on the
part of the ordinary church
goer.
5. Political prejudices.
6. Claims by Eastern Ortho
dox to be the sole possessors
of orthodoxy.
Father Duff said, however,
that “Given the divergence of
theological positions represent
ed in its membership, the
World Council’s existence is
a moral miracle.”
Meanwhile, a Gallup poll
published by the Catholic
Herald indicated that British
Catholics are stronger support
ers on unity than non-Catholic
Britons. Four out of ten Angli-
POLITICAL
ACTIVITY
UISEB
PROVIDENCE, R. I. (NC)—
The dean of a Catholic college
said here that “civic indiffer
ence and political apathy can
rightfully be regarded as one
of the great immoralities of
the present day.”
Father Joseph L. Lennon,
O.P., dean of Providence Col
lege, said in a speech: “In a
democracy such as ours and in
the complex society in which
we live, every citizen, in keep
ing with his time and talent,
is called upon to do something
for the wider social good. He
who does nothing is guilty of
sin.”
He spoke before the annual
diocesan meeting of the Chris
tian Family Movement.
The Dominican educator
said it is inconsistent to “pro
fess love of fellowman without
acting to perfect government
at this critical time in history.”
He added that “if Christians
in general, and parents in par
ticular, realized that the half
dead man helped by the Good
Samaritan is today represent
ed by a thousand million men,
undernourished, ill housed,
undereducated — four fifth of
mankind — then they would
be moved to a more intense
interest in government and in
politics.”
Newspaper
Urges Kindness
WORCESTER, Mass. (NC)—
A Catholic newspaper has urg
ed Catholics not to be “petty”
in evaluating the performance
of President Kennedy.
“There is a Catholic in the
White House, but if he is to be
judged, let him be judged as a
politician, not as a Catholic,”
said the Catholic Free Press,
Worcester diocesan newspaper.
The Free Press criticized
America, national Catholic
magazine published by the
Jesuits, for a recent editorial
on the President.
In that editorial, America
criticized Mr. Kennedy oppos
ing Federal aid to parochial
schools.
The Free Press said it is
“just as unhappy about the
President’s stand” as is Ameri
ca.
“But to bring the problem
down to a matter of religion
is . . . wrong,” it added.
“The matter of Federal aid
to education is a political de
bate. It is a matter of justice,
not religion.”
The Free Press also noted
America’s reference to the fact
that Mr. Kennedy is rarely
pictured with Catholic prelates
but often with non-Catholic
leaders.
“Could it be that Pope John
XXIII has employed the same
public relations man?” it ask
ed in reference to recent vis
its paid to the Pope by non-
Catholic churchmen.
cans are in favor of unity
while three in ten are against,
the poll showed. But twice as
many Catholics as Anglicans
and non-Anglican Protestants
supported the idea of talks
with- other denominations on
the subject.
The only major group indi
cating majority opposition to
unity consisted of members of
the (Presbyterian) Church of
Scotland. While only two out
of ten said they want unity,
six out of ten voiced opposi
tion.
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C. U. Plans
Workshops
For Summer
WASHINGTON, D. C.—The
Catholic University of Ameri
ca announces that six work
shops will be held on its
Washington campus, June 15-
26. Also announced is the
Thirteenth Annual Minor
Seminary Conference, May 11,
12, 13.
Included in the workshop
program will be philosophy,
problems of college admis
sions, adult education and ed
ucational television in the
Confraternity o f Christian
Doctrine program, special cas
es and special problems in ad-
olescense, music pedagogy,
perspective in nursing educa
tion, and teaching Thomasism
today.
A special feature will be a
three-day concentration on ed
ucational TV in the Confra
ternity program, with lectures
and demonstrations by special
ists in this field.
The careful organiation of
the workshops and the avail
ability of experienced per
sonnel provide representatives
of many and varied institu
tions the opportunity to dis
cuss and study issues which
relate directly to their own
fields.
During the May 11-13 Minor
Seminary Conference, there
will be a continuation of con
sideration of seminary “out
comes” at both the high school
and college levels. The Con
ference will be directed by
Rev. Cornelius M. Cuyler,
S.S., dean of studies, St.
Charles College, Catonsville,
Maryland.
Additional information may
be obtained by writing to Rev.
Robert Paul Mohan, S. S., Di
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Catholic University of Ameri
ca, Washington 17, D. C.
MARRIAGES
O O
| McGOWAN-BREMER |
O O
ATLANTA — Miss Jeanne
Elizabeth Bremer, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Gadsen
Bremer and Thomas Joseph
McGowan, son of Mrs. Thomas
Joseph McGowan of Birming
ham and the late Mr. Mc
Gowan, were married January
13th at the Sacred Heart
Church.
O O
| McCAULEY-McCLELLAN j
O O
ATLANTA — Miss Carol
Sutherland McClellan, daugh
ter of Mr. and Mrs. Howard
Robert McClellan and Law
rence Ward McCauley, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Halli-
gan McCauley of Decatur were
married January 19th at the
Cathedral of Christ the King.
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ARCHBISHOP URGES HALT
TO OFFENSIVE WORDS
(N.C.W.C. News Service)
LONDON—“No civilized Catholic today would
think of describing a sincere non-Catholic as a heretic,”
according to the leading British member of the Vatican
Secretariat for Promoting Christian Unity.
Archbishop John C. Heenan of Liverpool urged
Catholics to try to understand those who are not mem
bers of the Catholic Church and said: “It is no surrender
of Catholic principles to refrain from using offensive
words.”
“It is our plain duty as Catholics to foster charity
and to cherish all our fellow Christians,” said the
Archbishop. “It is not a pastoral hobby to be taken up
if we have no interest in golf or stamp-collecting. It is
a basic duty of every pastor of souls.”