Newspaper Page Text
t
*
t
9
4
GEORGIA BULLETIN, THURSDAY, APRIL 13, 1967 7
n
$ PRINTING
co>»fP4/ry
Strviuf AiUutm f(au-.9R'
• MINTING
• lithographing
550 FORUST »OAtL N. (_ ATLANTA, GEORGIA • TRinity S-4717
WHY SO LOW PRICED? OUR POSITION ASA DIRECT
FACTORY OUTLET WITH NO MIDDLE MAN PROFIT
OR EXPENSIVE OPERATING OVERHEAD ENABLES US
TO SAVE YOU MANY DOLLARS. THIS QUOTE HAS
BEEN THE KEYNOTE INTHEDEVELOPMENTOFONE
OF ATLANTA’S MOST INTERESTING CARPET BUSI
NESSES. RUG MARKET, OWNED BY THE MANAGE
MENT OF AN ATLANTA BASED TEXTILE FIRM,
PROMINENT IN THE MANUFACTURE OF BOTH RUGS
AND CARPETING, IS MANAGED BY A FORMER Rich’s
FLOOR COVERING BUYER.
SHORT ROLLS, CARPET REMNANTS
Ai4£> SELEOTED*IRREG 1>LA«R€ A "-ES
PECIALLY INTERESTING to bar -
GAIN MINDED ATLANTA HOMEMAK
ERS.
RUG MARKET
BROOKHAVEN
4010 Peachtree Road, N.E.
231-1735
hours 10 am till 9 pm
Sat. 10:00 am to 6 pm
EAST POINT
1200 Central Ave
761-6914
hours 9 pm till 6 pm daily
and Sat.
NEW LOCATION
TUCKER
3974 LAWRENCEVILLE HWY
Fr. Hess Dies,
SMA’s Oldest
TENAFLY, N.J. (RNS) A
Solemn Requiem Mass was
celebrated here for Father
/Peter J. Hess, S.M.A., oldest
member of the American Pro
vince, Society of African Miss
ions, who was 95 when he died
April 1.
Celebrant of the Mass, in
the society’s chapel, was Father
Patrick O* Donoghe, S.M.A.,
provincial superior. Interment
was in the Catholic order's
plot in Mount Carmel Ceme
tery here.
Father Hess, a priest for
72 years and a veteran mission
ary in Africa, sometimes
served in local parishes as a
week-end assistant, and almost
until his death was still able to
say Mass.
He was born in Alsace-
Lorraine, France, Feb. *10,
-1872, and was ordained -May 10,
1895 at the General Mother-
house of the Society of African
Missions in Lyons. From
1897-99, he was a teacher in the
society’s minor seminary in
Wilton, County Cork, Ireland.
In 1899 he was sent to mission
fields in Nigeria, West Africa,
but six years later returned to
France in. broken health and
not expected to live. However,
after a nine-year fight to regain
his health he recovered
sufficiently to resume his
priestly duties.
THREE houses are being
cleaned and renovated in the
area of 1017 Capitol Ave„ SW,
for use by Father Austin Ford,
former rector of St. Bartholo
mew Episcopal Church. Father
Ford intends to use the houses
in working with the inhabitants
of the area. He said, “I just
want to go in and represent
the Christian Church, and do
t-hings as they come. Just go
there and be—the people will
decide how to use the houses.”
Shown >i are i>>i froir^ i> left t ^iste£ i
Ellen John of St. Thomas More
and Maria Lindsay and Ann
Abercrombie, both Agnes Scott
students, all dusting with the
aid of young helper, Chris*
Bob Handell and Jim Miller,
Georgia Tech students remove
litter, Anna Marie Shoemaker
and Cathy Gadd, St. Pius stu
dents use a dust brush and Sis
ter Grace of St. Thomas More
Carol Hodges of. Agnes Scott
and Leslie Marris of Chamblee
give some kitchen cabinets a
going over.
St. Pius Wins
Literary Event
ST. PIUS High School has
taken top honors in the Region
5AA Literary Meet held at the
school in competition with four
other schools.
Placing first in the debate,
drama, spelling, boys declama
tion, girls declamation, and
girl’s essay the. school won a
total of 4 88 1 points topping four
other contenders.
Included also in this score,
were second place awards re
ceived in piano, home econo
mics, boys solo, girls solo,
and quartet. Third place grants
were given to boy’s essay and
the trio.
Other schools involved in this
literary contest wererClarks-
ton, Walker, Marist, and Sandy
Springs. These schools rank
ed second, third, fourth, and
fifth respectively. Clarkston to
taled 74 points and Walkerplac-
This child suffers from malnutrition. Only food and care now keep her from
being one of 10,000 children who will die today. On every continent
missionaries are at work bringing food, medicine and THE SOCIETY
the life-giving word of God to the poor. But they need your help. FOR THE
PROPAC ATION
WOULD YOU SEND A GIFT WITH THIS PICTURE TO SAVE A CHILD? ^
OF THE FAITH
" . ■' .. ■ -...’■'V V'!,'': ■ • . - ,W .'v. ' " . . ‘ •
TO RT. REV. EDWARD T. O'MEARA, NATIONAL DlRECTOR. 366 FIFTH AVE., N.Y., N.Y. lOOOl
PIZZA VILLAGE
DINING & TAKEOUT SERVICE
‘For Pizza As It Should Be'
5139 GLENWOOD RD., NEAR
CANDLER
PIZZA PAUL
- PROP
BU 9-7022
BRIARCLIFP
CLAIRMONT AREA
BURKETT TV
SALES SERVICE RENTALS
2783 CLAIRMONT ROAD N.Ei
ATLANTA 30329. CA.
ANTENNA SPECIALISTS
PHONE 636-7509
t Holy Cross
Brothers
TEACHING • BOYS’ HOMES
MISSIONS • TRADES
For Information, write:
BROTHER DONALD, C.S.C.
4950 N. DAUPHINE ST.
NEW ORLEANS, LA. 70117
IN ATLANTA YOUR DIRECTOR IS REV. NOEL BURTENSHAW, 2699 PEACHTREE RD., N.E., NORTHSIDE STATION.
BULLARD'S
LOCKMASTER
& SAFE CO.
5280 H Buford Highway
Doraville, Georgia
Phone 451-6242 & 3
Night Service Call - 876-1267
For Security Sake
Call A MASTER
Church’s Renewal Depends
On Accomodating Changes
ed high with 58 points. Marist
averaged 15 points while Sandy
Springs received 9.
4 Extension’
Sunday
j. Archbishop Hallihan has
written a'p'aSt6r£lTette'r'desig-"
nating April 23 “Extension Sun
day” in all the parishes of the
Archdiocese of Atlanta. The
Conference of American Bis
hops has suggested such a Sun
day in each diocese for solicit
ing subscriptions to Extension
Magazine, the national Catholic
picture monthly.
'The Bishops of the United
States are promoting Extension
Magazine in an attempt to get
excellent Catholic reading into
every Catholic home”, accord
ing to Monsignor John L. May,
publisher of Extension. “Ho
nored by their recommendation,
we are modernizing and deve
loping the magazine to explain
to all our readers the new spirit
in the Church and its effects
on all our lives”.
Extension is the only big
(same size as Life and Look)
magazine in the Catholic field
and has developed a new picture
and color presentation.
PITTSBURGH (NC)—Church
structures must be able to
accommodate the changes
brought about by Church re
newal, the biennial convention
of the National Council of Cath
olic Men was told here. The
convention was also given a
specific suggestion for a
structural. change in the ad
ministration of parishes.
The call for structures which
can accommodate change was
issued by Father Eugene Burke,
C.S.P. theologian from the
Catholic University of America
in Washington, D.C., who main
tained that all Church
structures “must be conceived
as subordinate to the values
they seek to communicate.”
‘ The suggestiOh' that lay ad- j
mihistratbYs 1 “ A'Ssfrme the '
temporal duties in parishes now
performed by priests was made
by James L. Hayes, dean of
Duquesne University’s School
of Business Administration.
Delivering the keynote address
to the convention, Father Burke
urged that in setting up
structures for renewal the
Church look to the American
political experience. In this
structure, he said, the Church
in the United States has “a
tremendous reservoir to draw
on.”
Father Burke held that any
Christian structure must allow
for community, witness and
service.
The central value in
community is charity, the
Paulist maintained.
With regard to service, a
new image of authority and
leadership must prevail, he
continued. That image must be
one of consensus and conver
sation and not authoritarianism,
Father Burke added.
With regard to Christian
witness, he stated that young
persons today insist on freedom
and authenticity.
“Freedom is at the very
heart of faith,” Father Burke
stated.
Thus, he continued, “by a
free decision we proclaim and
affirm” and any Church
structure must provide for this.
Stating that real participation
of all members of the people
of God is vital to any new
structure, he argued that there
must be established “consti
tutional forms with appellate
possibilities.*’
But Father Burke conceded,
“It’s going to come very hard
and very abrasively.*’
Father Burke said that the
theological view of the Second
Vatican Council affirms that
structures must have renewal
built into them. The view of
the pilgrim Church—“always
reformed, renewed, always in
process of purification’’—
brings just such an attitude.
Discussing parish structures,
Duquesne’s Dean Hayes said
that the Church in America has
“probably reached the stage
where very few parishes of
any size should exist without
a lay administrator.”
“In a day when vocations are
few,” he continued, “every
means at the disposal of the
parish should be used to free
the priests from the kinds of
duties in which he is not expert
in order to allow him to do
those things to which he is
called.”
Hayes declared that “the day
when the pastor could take care
of the temporal side of the
parish and the spiritual needs
began to break when the pastor
received his first priest-assis
tant.”
He deplored both over 4,
1 organization , and * disorgani
zation inparishes. He said many
parishes need “a real hard-
headed survey of whether or
not many forms of organization
within the parish have a right
to continue their existence."
He also said there must be a
sharper focus of parish goals.
“Rather than have a Holy
Name Society that is pursuing
some minor goal within a
parish, an altar society that
is pursuing another one, and
a school group in still a third
direction, is there not some
responsibility to see that the
goals of all parish organizations
are directed to the goals of the
parish?” he asked.
Hayes argued that confusion
was widespread. “Not many
parishes know whether their
balance sheets are good or
bad,” he commented. 'They
know whether they balance or
not, but they do not know if
it represents the, best job the
parish could have done.”
As an example, Hayes cited
tithing experiments to improve
’ parish giving. “Any parish
, council worth its salt Should
have sensed that this program
was at best an amateurish
effort,” he stated. “As a
concept it has been poorly
communicated, it is economi
cally not feasible, and it is
not the answer for every church.
Laymen in advertising and
public relations can do much
better. Parish councils should
find them and use them.’ ’
CLASSIFIEDS
Wonsley Moving & Storage Co.
AGENT FOR
UNITED
VAN LINES
Local & Long Distance Moving
phone PAUl c - McClellan
636-5719 373-3328
VI UV v Wg
IMPORTED
FROM SPAIN
Beautiful lace mantillas,
completely handmade. As
sorted designs, sizes, co
lors. Mrs. Lopez 237-7998
Desire job as Resident Man
ager, Joanne Boop, PL 5-0894.
PAINTING INTERIOR AND EX
TERIOR 40 years experience,
dbqs own work, H.M. Cole,
43;Glenroy Place, Smyrna, Ga.
435-0732.
REMODELING AND REPAIRING
Home Repairs, painting, additions, floor coverings
(tile & inlaid linoleum), plumbing, concrete work-
patios, driveways, retaining walls. All work guaran
teed.
A.C. Hosch REASONABLE RATES 241-4469
Painting Interior, Exterior
Thoroughly experienced expert, does own work. Hundreds of.
references furnished with each estimate. All windows and gut
ters cleaned free with job. Call Mr, Caldwell 622-6076
£ocietg of £aittt
444 EDGEWOOD AVE., N.E.
flittctni be flaul
ATLANTA, GEORGIA 30312
Store Hours Monday to Saturday
9 AM to 6 PM
Desires to receive all USABLE furniture, clothing, appliances,
books, vacuum packed food etc., for the poor and needy. Tele
phones, 525-0178 523-1541