Newspaper Page Text
RAYMOND "TONY" Harrell, Georgia artist, is shown here with young pupils in the art class he
conducts in the parish of Our Lady, in Carrollton. Studio was formerly rectory' and parish hall.
ART SCHOOL
Community Cooperation
By Carrollton Parish
In a fine spirit of commu
nity cooperation, and as a con
tribution to the young people, the
Church of Our Lady in Carroll
ton has made available, rent
free, its former parish hall in
the downtown area.
C & S
REALTY
COMPANY
"Specialists in Commercial
and Industrial Real Estate"
Suite 200
Henry Grady Bldg.
Atlanta 3 Ga.
Warehouses, Stores, Mfg.
Plants, Acreage,
Shopping Center Dev.,
Industrial Dev.,
Subdivision Dev.,
Insurance
524-2052
MIKE & STEVE
SERTICH
Since 1953, a temporary rec
tory and parish hall, the build
ing today is used as an art stu
dio for children. These budding
artists meet every Wednesday
afternoon to develop their ta
lents under the instruction of
•Raymond "Tony** Harrell.
They have their own easels
and particularly enjoy working
in oils and on canvasses. Their
sole contribution is nickels and
dimes, which go into a "kitty"
Tea Held At
On Sunday afternoon, Septem
ber 15th, a tea was held at St.
Mary’s School, Rome, to honor
the new orincipal, Sister Henry
Francis, and the parents of the
new students.
The pastor of St. Mary's
church, Father John McDo
nough, headed the receiving
line, which included Sister Hen
ry Francis and the three other
r. \
7] T
fSti
BYBEBT/i
/ COMPANY
• PUNTING 1/
* IITUA/YSiBUlki^
» TJUnify 1
5-4727
1 350 FORREST ROAD, N E.
ATLANTA. GEORGIA
Strvtut A lift* Suit ItlT
- 1 »"■— -W" l -li»i II
PAUSE FOR COKE
■OTTIID UN0 «» MJtMOHITV or TMt COCA-COLA COMA AMY OY
MARIETTA COCA-COLA BOTTLING CO.
MOVING? PLEASE NOTIFY US
. SEND US THIS NOTICE TODAY;
1 THE GEORGIA BULLETIN
P.O. BOX 11667-NOHTHSlDE STATION
ATLANTA^, GEORGIA
•NEW ADDRESS:
namp
addr psq
, CITY
.. . ZONE
'NAMP
ADDRFAS
CITY
ZONF
St. Jude Solemn Novena
October 19 Through 27, 1963
4\fc V ,'u rtv s»<nl O* fh* impoitibta
!o/ h#/p $*nd your p*fif'Om to fta
Nthontl Stain* of St tad* iod»y
A GIFT WILL ME SENT TO
THOSE TAKING PART IN THE
SOLEMN NOVENA
MARK PETITIONS, HU IN, CLIP AND MAIL
DEAR FATHER ROOERT PliASC PlAtl Mr R|T||iONS IEFORC THE NATIONAL
SHRINE Of ST JUDI IM THE COMING NOVtNA
C employment q happy marriage □ Thanksgiving
L ] PEACE Of MINO □ CONVERSION Of RUSSIA H _
□ PlNANClAl MIIP □ WORLD PEACE □ RETURN TO SACRAMENTS
I ENCLOSE I
for the Claretian seminary iuuding fund.
Name _
Address
City —
Zone
State
MAIL TOt NATIONAL SHRINE OF ST. JUDI
221 Weat Madleew Street, Sec. 12,‘Clikfo 4, Mllrtels
to pay the light bill.
Mr. Harrell, who has done
much portrait work in the West
Georgia area, is manager of a
furniture store, attends art
classes in Atlanta, and teaches
the children’s classes on his
afternoon off. He is married to
Mary Ann Harrell, who is pre
sident of the Altar Society of
the Church of Our Lady, and is,
himself, a member of the Me
thodist Church in Carrollton.
St. Mary’s
sisters who teach in the school,
Sister Catherine Margaret, Sis
ter Rose Celeste, and Sister
Pierre Marie. Also in the re
ceiving line were the officers
of St. Mary’s Auxiliary who
are: Mrs. Frank Near, presi
dent, Mrs. Jack Tolbert, vice-
president, Mrs. Charles Hoel-
zer, recording secretary, Mrs.
Kenneth Hart, corresponding
secretary, and Mr. Leo Woll-
stein, treasurer.
Greeting people at the door
were other members of the
Executive Committee includ
ing Mrs. Ted Munchak, Mrs.
John Gill, Mrs. Pat Ceceri,
Mrs. Rolamd Otto, and Mrs.
Robert Woodruff, who direct
ed the visitors to the receiv
ing line in the Cafetorium and
then to the tea table. Assist
ing with refreshments were
Mrs. Robert Cescutti, Social
Chairman, and Mrs. George
Briggs, Mrs. Edmund Cescutti,
and Mrs. Ciro Pena. Mrs. Ja
mes Whitney, Program Chair
man, gave each visitor a copy
of the Yearbood containing in
formation about the School Au
xiliary, and the Official School
Calendar for the year.
Men Meet At
Most Blessed
Sacramement
The first joint meeting of the
Most Blessed Sacrament Church
Parish Altar Society and the
Parish Council of Men was held
in early September at the
Parish House, 1926 Austin Rd.,
S. W. to plan coming activities
and to share the talk of the fe
atured speaker, the Right Rev
erend Augustine Moore, Abbot
of the Holy Ghost Monaster.
The Abbot stressed looking
for good in our daily activit
ies, our contacts with poeple
and to offer up our works and
trials as prayer.
JULIUS GILBERSON of Ra
cine, Wia., will take office
on January 1 as the new
president of the National
Newman Club Federation.
He was graduated in June
from Wisconsin State Col
lege, Eau Claire, Wis.
TELLS MARIAN SODALITY
Virgin Mary Offers Man
Spiritual Riches-Pope
ROME (NC) Devotions to the
Blessed Virgin Mary offers man
spiritual riches^with which he
can face the crises and great
problems of daily life. His Ho
liness Pope Paul VI told some
5,000 members of Marian so
dalities.
On his return from his sum
mer residence at Castelgandol-
to Rome (Sept. 12) the Pope
stopped first at the Rome church
of St. Ignatius to offer Mass
for the members of the Marian
congregations. The sodallsts,
here for a European congress
of their societies Include dele
gates from 14 countries on this
continent and representatives
from nine non-European nat
ions.
POPE PAUL was greeted at
St. Ignatius’ by Luigi Cardinal
Traglla, his Pro-Vicar Gene
ral foif Rome; Father Jean B.
Janssens, S.J., Superior Gene
ral of die Jesuits, and Arch
bishop Jozef Gawllna, direc
tor general of the International
Association of Marian Congre
gations.
The Pope said that devotion
to Our Lady St. Mary is among
"the most authentic and fruit
ful of Catholic spirituality."
Then he asked, "What do men
seek in life?" Answering his
own question, he said:
"Men seek beauty, and Mary
is the apex of beauty... They
seek greatness and Mary has
surpassed every ordinary limit
in the sense of true greatness
and by reason of this she has
become the only human creature
who could say 'All generations
shall call me blessed.’
"MEN SEEK joy, and the
birth of Mary was for the whole
world an occasion of joy, the
passing from an 'economy' of
damnation to an ‘economy’ of
blessing, from a world in which
blows succeeded on blows to a
world in which one fully enjoys
the liberty of an adopted son.
"Men seek love, and Mary
who at Cana desired that noth
ing be lacking to honor pure
love, shows men where they
may contemplate the highest
feminine ideals — in virginity
and in motherhood enhanced by
beauty and by fullness of
grace."
The Pope exhorted his list—
The North and South Geo
rgia Conferences of the Metho
dist Church, in cooperation with
Education for Freedom, will
present, on Sept. 26, a day
long synposium for churchmen
entitled "Christianity Con
fronts Communism.*’ The con
ference will be held in the
Wesleyan College Auditorium in
Macon between 10 am and 5 pm.
The keynote speaker of the
program will be Mr. Wm. C.
Sullivan, Assistant Director of
the Federal Bureau of Investi
gation, charged with domestic
subversion. Mr. Sullivan is a
prominent Catholic layman and
a nationally known authority on
communism.
OTHER SPEAKERS will in
clude Mr. Frank R. Barnett,
project manager of the Ameri
can Bar Association’s Commit
tee on Education Against Com
munism; Dr. William Ragsdale
Cannon, Dean of Emory Uni
versity’s Candler School of
Theology; Dr. Hiram J. Mc
Lendon, of Harvard University,
a noted lecturer of American
eners to stay close to the tra
ditional Marian devotions sanc
tioned by the Church, recom
mending the meditations of the
Rosary in particular.
Pope Paul’s return to Rome
marked the end of his five-week
stay at the hilltop villa in the
Alban Hills south of Rome. He
had gone to Castelgandolfo on
August 5, and made a practice
of going to churches in nearby
towns to offer Sunday Mass for
the local people.
foreign policy* Dr. Harry Ric
hardson, founder and first pre
sident of the Interdenominatio
nal Theological Center, Atlanta;
and Bishop John Owen Smith,
Episcopal head of the Atlanta
Area Methodist Church.
The meeting is open to all
churchmen and is designed to
provide basic information about
the nature of the communist
threat facing Christianity. The
cooperating organization, Edu
cation for Freedom, is a non
profit educational corporation
interested in informing Ame
ricans as to the dangers of In
ternational Communism and the
measures taken by the Free
World to defend itself against it.
Albany To Study
Birth Control
ALBANY, Ga.,(NC)—The Al
bany city commission has
recommended unanimously that
the Dougherty County Board of
Health launch a study of pos
sible birth control programs
"in order to reduce charity and
welfare."
SYMPOSIUM WILL STUDY
Communist Threat
To Christianity
CATHOLIC LAYMEN HAVE ROLE
Pope Issues New Rules
For Council 2nd Session
VATICAN CITY, (NC)—Pope
Paul VI has directed that Catho
lic laymen be admitted to the
second session of the ecumeni
cal council and that non-Chrls-
tian as well as other non-Ca-
tholic representatives be wel
comed as observers.
-ADMISSION OF some Ca
tholic laymen and some repre
sentatives of the major Interna
tional Catholic institutions
which have been recognized by
ecclesiastical right into the
council deliberations.
-Reinvitation of non-Catho-
11c Christian observers at- the
council, increasing the number,
and also inviting the represen
tatives of non-Christian reli
gions who were not invited to
the first session.
-Abolition of the present
council Secretariat for Extra
ordinary Affairs and the ap
pointment of cardinal dele
gates or moderators who will
have the task of directing the
work of the council.
THE DISCLOSURES were
contained in a letter dated Sep
tember 22, addressed to the
council president, Eugene Car
dinal Tisserant.
Regarding the first point, the
council Press bulletin specified
that the Catholic laymen who
will be selected to attend will
act in the capacity of auditors
of the council. As "qualified
representatives of the Catholic
lay apostolate they will be able
to assist in the conciliar work
and eventually they may even
be called upon to give their ad
vice to the conciliar commis
sions."
INTERNATIONAL Catholic
institutes would include orga
nizations or movements that
have achieved recognition in
their endeavors in various
fields such as education and re
lief.
Regarding observers, the let
ter states that the Pope has al
ready again "called to the ecu
menical council observers of
Christians separated from the
Apostolic See and sought to in
crease the number (of them).
Moreover it has seemed oppor
tune for Us to extend the efforts
of the Secretariat (for Promot
ing Christian Unity) previously
established also to those who
are members of non-Christian
religions.”
REGARDING the third point,
the letter pointed out that the
Pope has already named to the
college of the presidents of the
council three of the cardinals
who had been members of the
now abolished Secretariat for
Extraordinary Affairs. They
are Stefan Cardinal Wyszynskl,
Primate of Poland; Guiseppe
Cardinal Slri, Archbishop of
Genoa, Italy, and Albert Car
dinal Meyer, Archbishop of Chi
cago.
The Secretariat for Extraor
dinary Affairs In fact had been
superseded by the Commission
for the Coordination of the
Council’s Works, which Pope
John had instituted at the end
of the first session.
L'OSSERVATORE Romano,
Vatican City daily, reported
that the posts of moderators
will be held by Gregorio Car
dinal Agagianian, Prefect of the
Sacred Congregation for the
Propagation of the Faith; Gia
como Cardinal Lercaro, Arch
bishop of Bologna, Italy; Julius
Cardinal Doepfner, Archbishop
of Munich and Freising, Ger
many, and Leo Cardinal Sue-
nens, Archbishop of Malines-
Brussels, Belgium.
Cardinal delegates or mode
rators will direct all the work
of the council, but the Council
of the Presidency will continue
to preside over all the indivi
dual general congregations of
the council meeting, according
to the council press bulletin. It
is to be noticed that two of die
moderators, Cardinals Doepf
ner and Suenens, were mem
bers of the abolished secre
tariate. The council presidency
is charged with seeing that the
standards of the council are ob
served.
THE OPENING passages of
the letter were devoted to praise
of Pope John XX111 for the call
ing of the Second Vatican Coun
cil, and to the wish that it be
concluded and crowned with the
success he wanted for it.
Pope Paul repeated the hope
that the council would result in
the "benefit and increase of the
Apostolic See and of the Catho
lic Church. . .for die greater
prosperity of the life of the Ca-
holic Church, for the hastening
of union of separated brothers
with the Catholic Church, and
for the promotion of peace and
the spiritual prosperity of hu
manity throughout the world."
THE POPE confirmed re
ports that the projects now to
be considered by the council
number 17, which "for the
greater part have been sent to
the bishops."
"IN THE reworking of the
projects the preeminence of
the pastoral nature of this coun
cil was kept in mind. In fact it
is necessary that the sure and
unchangeable doctrine of the
Faith declared and defined by
the supreme magisterium of the
Church and by preceding ecu
menical councils, above all that
of the Trent and of the First
Vatican Council which must be
faithfully respected, be ex
pounded in a manner that is
consistent with our times, so
that men of our time may find
it more easy to embrace truth
and to receive the salvation that
Jesus Christ gave to them."
In the letter Pope Paul re
ported that among other decis
ions taken to make the council
more effective was the appoint
ment of American-born Arch
bishop Martin J. O'Connor, rec
tor of the North American Col
lege in Rome, as president of
the council press committee.
The Pope’s letter disclosed
that the Council Fathers would
have a five day week with Sat
urday and Sunday off. However,
he noted that at the same time
there would be a number of bea
tifications and other solemn
ceremonies throughout the
council period. Most of them
will take place on Saturdays
or Sundays.
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1963 GEORGIA BULLETIN PAGE 3
POPE AND SECRETARY OF STATE. This unusual picture was
taken on the steps of the cathedral in Frascati, Italy, where
His Holiness Pope Paul VI had gone to celebrate Mass dur
ing his stay at the summer villa of Castelgandolfo. Shown
with the Holy Father is Amleto Giovanni Cardinal Cicog-
nani, left, Papal Secretary of State, who is Titular Bishop of
Frascati. Cardinal Cicognani was long Apostolic Delegate
in the United States before his elevation to the Sacred Col
lege of Cardinals.
Catholic Is Postmaster
WASHINGTON, (NC)—When
John S. Gronouski, 43, takes
office as Postmaster General,
he will become the 18th Catho
lic to serve in a President’s
Cabinet.
It also will mark the first
time that three Catholics have
held Cabinet post simultan
eously. The other two in Pre
sident Kennedy’s Cabinet are
Att, Gen. Robert F. Kennedy,
the President's brother, and
Secretary of Health, Education
and Welfare Anthony J. Cele-
brezze.
GRONOUSKI, who has been
Wisconsin’s Tax Commissioner
in Madison, Wis., since Janu
ary, 1960, was named (Sept, 9)
by President Kennedy to suc
ceed J. Edward Day, who re
signed as Postmanster General
last month.
Gronouski was born in Dun
bar, Wis., and reared in Osh
kosh, Wis., where he attended
St. Peter's School. He attend
ed Oshkosh State College,
OLD SARGE
SURPLUS
ARMY AND CIVILIAN
SURPLUS
Hunting, Fishing, Camping
Equipment
(Buy, Trade, Sell Most
Anything)
Hwy. 23 - Next door to
Pine Tree Plaza
Doraville, Ga. 451-3377
Jet to
Europe
for as
little as
$31 down
That’s not a misprint. It’s your 10% down-
payment on Irish International’s 21-Day
Economy Excursion Fare to Ireland from
New York. What do you have to do to be
eligible for unprecedented low fares to all of
Europe? Just go for 2 or 3 weeks anytime
between October 1 and April 30. That’s all it
takes to take the trip of your dreams for less
than you ever dreamed it would cost!
If you’re planning a pilgrimage, all the more
reason why Irish is the way to go. Because
Irish serves most of Europe’s major shrines!
If you’d rather go with a group, ask your
Travel Agent about Irish International’s low
fares for groups of 25 or more. Down pay
ment shown above is based on New York/
Shannon 21-day fare of $305.
m IRISH
immnom
mm
mums
Irish International Airlines
1028 CONNECTICUT AVE. N.W.
WASHINGTON, D.C.
Please send me your free booklet showing the pay
ment arrangements available on your Shamrock
Thriftair Plan.
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
l
L
NAME, ■■
ADDRESS. _ _
QTY SOME _ STATE
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
t
i
i
i
i
j