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PAGE 6 GEORGIA BULLETIN THURSDAY, DECEMBER 26, 1963
Thousandaire Headquarters
WEST END
GORDON AT ASHBY
TENTH STREET
I t 24 ofACHTUtt
BUCKHEAD
FtACHTUft AT RltDMONT
LAKEWOOD
LAKEWOOD AT STEWART
COLLEGE PARK
3981 MAIN STREET
BROOKHAVEN
4008 PEACHTREE
MAIN OFFICE
marietta at broad
Atlanta Federal Savings
J.J. JARDINA & CO.
STATE FARMERS MARKET 366-6668
FOREST PARK, GA.
Oliver Electronics
LEADING THE SOUTH
80 Mill St. N. W.
Atlanta, Ga.
JA 3-6055-
CHAT 'N chew
AcroM From City Hall
CHARBROILED STEAKS.
„, sea foods our specialty
DK 9-4498 Hal
DUGGAN OPTICAL COMPANY
OPTOMETPISTS AND OPTICIANS
221 MITCHELL ST. S.W.
2645 N, DECATUR RD., DECATUR
OWEN PHARMACY
PRESCRIPTION EXPERTS
130 W. King St. Dtlton, Georgia BR 8-1730
Chattahoochee
Brick Company
7*5611 - P. 0. Box 17031 Chattahoochee Station
ATLANTA 21. GEORGIA
2W 'll/iJut
john McDaniel
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WO MURPHY AVE.. S.W. PL. 5-7711
ATLANTA 10. OA.
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54 - 56
Alabama St., S.W.
A Farovlte With Children And Parents
In The Archdiocese For Long Years.
Office Equipment Business Machines
Sales-Service-Supplies
PHONE 525-6417
PHONE 525-6417
172 WHITEHALL STREET, S.W.
ATLANTA 3, GEORGIA
Kins
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"SOLS AT HADING STOMV
PAUSE FOR COKE
• •01 .... I
•ottud unm» »utho»nr or th* coc* col* company by
MARIETTA COCA-COLA BOTTLING CO.
FAMILY REUNION
Sabates Get-Together
Took Some Doing
HACKNEY
SHOE SHOP
116 King St.
HACKNEY’S
HEEL BAR
Shirley will be hospitalized
for at least a year and will re
quire therapy to enable her to
perform a few simple actions
such as feeding herself.
THE COMMUNITY effort to
help the girl—the oldest of
six children of Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth Breeman—is being di
rected by Father John Dericks,
pastor at Holy Spirit, and Judge
Herbert Irwin,
Shirley Is taking her ordeal
like a trouper. One day she told,
her father, "I’d like to put all
my troubles Into a bag and give
them away.” But she quickly-
changed her mind, saying: "No
—then they’d only be troubles
for someone else.”
THE PLUCKY LASS is offer
ing her suffering for the souls
in purgatory and asked her
family if they thought "God has
a lot more people He wants to
OUR LADY OF THE ASSUMPTION wins C. Y. 0. Football championship with a perfect record.
Bottom, left to right: Bob Whire, Bill Carroll, Mike DiCarlo, Bob Fannon, Steve Flood, Bruce
Porter, Steve Morgan. Second row left to right: Steve Grubbs, Terry Brody, Paul Hutchens,
Elwood Euart, Vincent Troisi, Dick Whire, Ben Wood, Steve Signiago, Randy Frederick, Danny
Kauffman. Third row:. David Dieterle, Jack Hallfelder, Frank McCloskey, Greg Williamson,
Chris Kauffman, Tom Fraser, Jay Smither, Bill Miller, Charles Merz. Fourth row; Coach Tom
Whire, Mike Settles, Joe Neiner, Bill Carter, Coach Bob Malone, Mike Clennan, Tom Eidson,
Mike Millard, Coach Joe Signiago.
LUNSFORD-WILSON CO. :
714 STEWART AVE.. S. W. t PL. 3-1228
ATLANTA. GA.
A NEW STATION WAGON WAS PRESENTED TO THE SISTERS by the parishioners at the SS.
Peter and Paul Christmas play. Shown here are, left to right, the pastor, Fr. Michael Manning,
Mother M- Edmunda, Sister Rita Regina, Sister M. Celina, Sister M. Laetitia and Sister Judith
Anne.
ST. DOMINIC SAVIO
St. Joseph’s Home Gets Charter
CHARLOTTE, N. C.~ The
Sabates family is getting toge
ther again—and that takes a bit
of doing.
Three years ago Guillermo
and Lady Rose Sabates, living
in Cuba, faced a problem. Un
der the Fidel Castro regime,
their two sons and daughters
had to go to school to get cloth
ing and food. And in school they
were taught communism.
The parents weighed the choice
between Catholicism and com
munism, then lost no time pack
ing their youngsters aboard a
plane and sending them to the
U. S. — knowing they might not
see them again.
SOME WEEKS ago Guillermo
and Lady Rose Sabates got out
of Cuba. They came here via
Mexico, then Panama, where
Mrs. Sabates has a brother.
They’re now staying with Saba-'
tes* sister, Mrs. Maria Tano
in Lexington, N. C., while Cat
holic Social Services of
Charlotte arranges the family
reunion.
The 7th and 8th grade Savio
Club of St. Joseph's Home,
Washington, received its offi
cial charter from the Supreme
Council of the St. Dominic Sa
vio Classroom Club, National
Poll Shows
LBJ Ahead
PRINCETON, N. J. (NC) —
Nine out of 10 Catholics ques
tioned by the Gallup poll said
they would vote for President
Johnson in preference to Sen.
Berry Goldwater in a presiden
tial election.,
Figures reported here by
George Gallup, director of the
American Institute of Public
Opinion, showed President Joh
nson getting 91% of the votes
of Catholics, Sen. Goldwater the
choice of 6% , and 3% "undec
ided and other."
GALLUP said the late Pre
sident Kennedy, a Catholic, re
ceived 78% of the votes cast by
Catholics in the 1960 election.
He said his poll indicates that
Mr. Johnson "has an opportu
nity to develop as much support
from this group as did
Kennedy."
However, Gallup added, his
figures represented public at
titudes in "the very early days
of the new admlniistration and
undoubtedly will change in the
futre as political ’battle lines'
begin to take more definite fo-
Headquarters, New Rochelle,
New York.
It is the 16th charter grant
ed to Catholic Schools of Geor
gia this year, 1963-64.
Officers of the newly orga
nized club are: president, Jose
Nodar; vice-president, Jim
Nodar; vice-president, Jim
Gregg; secretary, Shaw Bus
sey; treasurer, Eduardo Es-
carpanter.
St. Joseph’s new unit is one
of the many thousands through
out the nation. The primary
object of the Savio Club is the
sanctification of the classroom,
for grades fifth through the
tenth.
Each member receives a club
pin, membership card and a
copy of the club’s monthly pub
lication, Savio Notes, which has
St. Jude's Party
On Monday evening, Decem
ber 11th, the ladies of Saint
Judes Altar Society were guests
of Father Stapleton, their pas
tor, at the annual Christmas
party held in the cafetorium of
the school. A short entertain
ment program was given, then
carols were sung while Santa
surprised each lady with a gift.
A beautiful table filled with de
licious food and drink, was en
joyed by everyone. We were
honored by the presence of our
nuns and lay teachers.
JERSEY TOWN
a reading circulation exceeding
350,000. Moderators are fur
nished with complete material
for conducting the club.
There already have been
telephone reunions between the
parents and children. It
"shook" Mrs. Sabates to learn
GEORGETOWN SESSION
her daughters, Lady Rose, 12,
and Norma, 9, now staying with
a relative inColumbia, Mo., sp
eak little Spanish after three
years in the U. S. Mrs. Saba
tes, who naturally speaks little
English, said in Spanish: "All
Norma could say in Spanish was
“si, momma.’"
THERE wasn’t much of a pro
blem with the boys who still
remember their Spanish. Wil
liam, who turned 15 on Dec. 23
and used to be Guillermo in
Cuban days, and Roberto, 13,
are living with Mr. and Mrs.
David Metzgar in Albuquerque,
N. M. William had a question—
"Do they have basketball in
Charlotte?" He’s developed an
adeptness with the roundball.
The Sabates family will be
reunited and begin life all over
again here. Msgr. Michael J.
Begley of Catholic Social Ser
vices has rented a home for
them. Sabates is fast learning
English.
It won’t be long now before the
whole family is reunited — and
the Sabates youngsters will be
going to Catholic schools, aga
in.
Child’s Accident
Unites Village
Birth Problems
Basis Of Study
Bryman’s Pla?a
ZHIah’s Flower Shop
FLOWERS FOR ALL OC
CASIONS. FAST, FRIEND
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JA 4-5154
284 -6952 night number
.LITTLE FIVE POINTS
421 MORELAND AVE., N.E.
ATLANTA. GA.
PEQUANNOCK, N.J. (NC)—One
girl's suffering has helped unite
this community.
get into heaven and that's why
He’s letting me suffer so
much?"
WASHINGTON (NC) — A
month-long course on moral and
social aspects of the population
problem will be conducted next
summer at Georgetown Univer
sity here.
The session, to be held June
17 to July 22, will bring to-
bether demographers, socio
logists, economists, clergy
men, educators and public offi
cials.
THEY WILL CONSIDER such
topics as "world population
growth, world resources and
technology, the current status
of fertility control, the Roman
Catholic >dew on population con
trol, the Protestant view on pop
ulation control, population
trends and the underdeveloped
nations, birth control and pub
lic policy, family size, rhythm
and the (anti-ovulation) ’pill’,"
according to a statement out
lining purposes of the course.
The session will take place
under auspices of Georgetown’s
Institute of Social Ethics.
THE INSTITUTE said in a
statement that world population
Is now growing by 45 million
yearly and commented: "Such
a rate of growth creates ob
vious and enormous social
problems.’’
The institute added, however,
that fears of disaster as a re
sult of population growth "neg
lect not only the potential of
technological change but the
value of human beings and their
potential productive capacity."
SEN. ERNEST Gruening of
Alaska, a leading advocate of
efforts to 1 i m i t population
growth, recently told the Senate
that he had accepted an invita
tion to speak at the session.
The girl is 11-year-old Shir
ley Breeman. She would have
entered the seventh grade at
Holy Spirit School here in Sep
tember if she had been able.
But Shirley was totally para
lyzed by an injury in a back
yard pool last July.
SINCE THEN THE people of
Holy Spirit parish and their
neighbors have raised $10,000
to help pay her medical bills,
expected to reach $17,000.
A DOOR-TO-DOOR canvass
has been organized to raise
funds for her medical bills. The
Rotary Club donated $500 to
ward purchase of a device to
project print on the ceiling so
Shirley can read. A beauty par
lor donated a day’s receipts.
The community has united to
help one of Its own.
Other participants, according
to the Institute of Social Ethics,
will Include scholars from such
institutions as Princeton, Ame
rican and St. Louis Universi
ties, the Brookings Institute,
and Woodstock College, a Jesuit
seminary.
CONFERENCES ON popula
tion questions have been held
at other U. S. Catholic universi
ties, including Notre Dame, but
most of these have been of f-the-
record sessions limited to a
small group of invited specia
lists. Georgetown, site of next
summer's conference, also has
a center for Population Re
search which has been in ope
ration since early this year.
NATIONAL HONOR—Jerry
J. Walsh, 41, of Corona, L. L,
has been named Handicapped
American of the Year by the
President's Committee on
Employment of the Handi
capped. He has devoted his
life to helping victims of
arthritis since his own future
as a big league baseball play
er was blighted by the ail
ment.
Jor (jracioud &
Convenient cjCiviny
THE HOWELL HOKE
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710 Peachtree Rd., N.E.
TR.3-4 821
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225 Buckhoad Ave„ N. E. — CE 3-3113
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Atlanta, Ga.
BROWH & PIERCE AUTO SEN.
PURE OIL PRODUCTS
i
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Service — Wrecker Service
4575 PEACHTREE ROAD GL. 7-9113
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SHERIFF OF FULTON BOUNTY
T. Ralph Grimes