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THE BULLETIN OF THE CATHOLIC LAYMEN’S ASSOCIATION OF GEORGIA
JANUARY 23, 1926.
NEWS OF THE KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUS
Schweigert & Co.
JEWELERS
AUGUSTA, GA. \
Rosary Beads, gold and silver,
etc., Scapular and other medals,
Pocket Statues, K. of C, Rings,
Fobs and Buttons.
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1286 BROAD STREET
AUGUSTA, GA.
Foot Bandage
Supporting the forward longi
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toes, pains or cramps just back
of the toes. Price $1.00.
Mail orders receive prompt at
tention. S
Rice & O’Connor
Shoe Co.
850 Broad St. Augusta, Ga.
ST. LEO ACADEMY
Accredited High School
Conducted hv the Benedictine
Fathers.
Ideal Location
St. Leo, Pasco County Florida
CHARLOTTE COUNCIL NO. 770
KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUS
Charlotte, N. C.
Meets First and Third
Tuesdays
J. J. Montague, Grand Knight.
Leo. H. Pliclan Fin. Secy.
K. OF C. SUPREME DIRECTORS AT AUGUSTA
—Photo by Monteli,
The members of the Supreme Board of the Knights of Columbus, headed by Supreme Knight Jam/s A!' F!ah°rty '’’philadJin hk’'’are
shown in the photograph above, taken at the Bon Air-Vanderbilt, one of the South’s tourist hotels. Some of the members were accom
panied by their wives, and they appear in the group.
AUGUSTA CARD PARTIES
Augusta, Ga.—The Alumnae of
Sacred Heart School, of which Miss
Margaret Funk is president, con
ducted a successful card party at
the K. of C. Home January 13, Miss
Louise Gardner, Mrs. T. P. Doris
and Mrs. Louise Schler being in
charge. Miss Bernardine Hester
awarded the prizes. The Council
of Catholic Women has arranged
a card party for Tuesday of this
week, the party to be held in the
quarters of Ihe club at the K of C.
Home, the first affair of its kind
to be held there since the Club
secured the quarters.
EYES EXAMINED
Eye Glasses
Spectacles
Artificial
Eyes
Properly Fitted.
CODIN SPECT4CLE CO.
956 Broad St 956
Augusta, Ga.
GEORGIA STATE COUNCIL
KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUS
IV. H. MITCHELL, Macon, State Deputy
A. M. BATTEY, Augusta, State Secretary.
w W a ES >!lr’vnPRS t, s All>any i Statc Treasurer.
W:Ik £ A ,V^DER T S ,\VP n na b > State Advocate.
•l0SEPHI;.O State Warden.
REV. PHILII HASSON, S. M., Atlanta, State Chaplain.
t
Atlanta Council No. 060
J. J. L-IIattc, Grand
Knight
George T. Flynt, Financial
Secretary.
Meets Every Tuesday
Evening 8 P. M., at
Knights of Columbus
Building.
18 E. Pine St., Atlanta, Ga.
Patrick Walsh Council,
No. 677
J. Coleman Dempsey,
Grand Knight.
R. S. Heslin, Financial
Secretary.
Meels Second and
Fourth Thursday of
Each Month
1012 Greene St. Augusta, Ga.
Savannah Council
No. 631
los. O. Maggioni, Grand Knight
J. H. Murphy, Financial Sec
retary
.T. B. McDonald, Recorder.
Meets Second and Fourth
Wednesday, 8 P. M.
3 W. Liberty Street,
Savannah, Ga.
Macon Council No. 925
Julius E. Loh, Grand
Knight.
J. V. Sheridan, Financial
Secretary.
Meets the First and
Third Tuesday, 8 P. M.,
at Knights of Columbus
Hall.
567 Mulberry St., Macon, Ga.
FATHER PRENDERGAST COUNCIL,
No. 2057, Albany, Ga.
J. H. Lynch, Grand Knight. N. F. Dugan, Deputy Grand Knight.
Meets second Tuesday in each month at Knights of Columbus Hall
Bishop Gross
Council No. 1019
Columbus, Ga.
J. M. Tobin, Grand Knight;
Robert Grier, Financial Secre
tary; George J. Burrus, Record
ing Secretary.
Meets First and Third Tuesday.
8:00 P. M., at Knights of Colum
bus Hall, Broad and Thirteenth
Street, Columbus, Ga.
Carolina, Georgia K. of C.
Officials Greet Directors
One of the features of the meet
ing of the Supreme Board of the
Knights of Columbus in Augusta
was the coming to the city of dele
gations from the various cities to
meet the directors and pay their re
spects to them. The Georgia Knights
were headed by State Deputy Win.
H. Mitchell of Macon, and the
Knights of South Carolina by State
Deputy John I. Cosgrove of Cbar-
1 sfon and Past State Deputy Fred
Bultman of Columbia. The delega
tion from Atlanta included Rev.
Philip A. Hasson, S. M., state chap
lain; A. A. Baumstark, district dep
uty; James A. LaHatte, grand
knight; T. A. Kelly, deputy grand
knight; James Gillespie treasurer;
and C. J. Collins, warden.
Savannah carried off the honors
for numbers, totaling about fifty led
by Grand Knight J. 0. Maggioni and
Rev. Fr. Gregory. O. S. B., faithful
friar of tile fourth degree assembly.
Charleston sent over delegations
rom Hire of its four Councils
Grand Knight James Lannan head-
i ig the Charleston delegaiton, Grand
Knight J. J. Hughes and Past Grand
Knight J. J. Brennan the Sumter
Council, and Past Grand Knight
Philip Morgan that from Columbia.
Alabama Masked Raiders
Given Jail Sentences
Birmingham, Ala.—Four men
charged with complicity in raids
conducted the night of January 2 on
three Chinese restaurants were fined
and sentenced to jail in police court
here January 13. One was lined and
sentenced $100 and ninety days; two
others $100 and thirty days, and the
fourth $50 and a suspended sentence
of thirty days. Two of those sen
tenced are officials of the local Iilan.
The defendants intimated they
would appeal.
'the raids were made on the res-
turants after a search warrant had
been secured, but the accused men
are charged with participating in it
while masked and robed. The court
ruled it had no right to question the
legality of the search warrant nor
the special commission said to have
been given the raiders by the sher
iff, but declared that “it is a matter
of common knowledge that officers
of the law do not proceed to exercise
their functions while masked and
robed, and this act alone, even
though the raiders had been bona
fide officers of the law, would tend
to provoke a breach of the peace.”
WA R D, S. C., TRIDUUM
Special to The Bulletin:
Ward, S. C.,—Rev. C. A. McLaugh
lin, S. J, conducted a triduum for
the Sisters of Mercy of St. Wil
liam’s School here last week, and
also delivered a series of sermons
to the members of the congregation,
which is in charge of Rev. George
J. Dietz. Sunday Father McLaughlin
delivered sermons at the ten o’clock
Mass and in the afternoon. This is
the famous South Carolina parish
where all the parishoners are mem
bers of one family, descendants of
two converts, the late William Rod
gers, who died recently, and Mrs.
Rodgers, and numbering, with their
families, considerably more than
one hundred.
Supreme Board Meeting
Second of Kind in South,
First in the Southeast
(By N. C. W. C. News Service.)
Augusta, Ga.—The first meeting of
the supreme board of directors of
the Knights of Columbus ever held
in the Southeast and the second in
the South was entertained here on
January 9 and 10 when the direc
tors gathered for their winter ses
sion at the Bon Air-Vanderbilt. The
board decided to hold its summer
meeting in Chicago durng the Eu
charistic Congress. The Spring
meeting will be held in Washington.
The directors came to Augusta at
the invitation of Captain P. H. Rice,
K. S. G., a member of the board and
president of the Catholic Laymen's
Association of Georgia. These gath
erings are strictly business, but the
directors found time to be guests of
the people of Augusta at a Georgia
barbecue given in their honor Sat
urday night at Forrest Hills Lodge.
Grand Rapids, Mich., deputy supreme
of Patrick Walsh Council, presided.
Captain Rice introduced the direc
tors, and Martin J. Carmody, of
Grand Rpids, Mich., deputy supreme
knight, responded to the address of
welcome.
Delegations from Atlanta, Macon,
and Savannah in Georgia, and Char
leston, Columbia, and Sumter in
South Carolina, traveled hundreds
of miles to Augusta to meet the su
preme directors. Forty members
oi fhe Fourth Degree Assembly of
Savannah Council traveled more
than 130 miles to Augusta and as
sisted in full regalia at the High
Mass at Sacred Heart Church, Rev.
David J. Foujkes, S. J., of the New
Orleans Mission Band, delivering
the sermon. Saturday night the
Savannah Knights were hosts at a
dance at Forrest Hills Lodge for
their Augusta and other brethren.
Supreme Knight James A. Flaher
ty was the principal speaker at the
annual dinner-dance of the Patrick
Waish Council of Augusta at the
Bon Air-Vanderbilt Monday night.
Past Grand Knight C. C. Stulb de
livered the address of welcome, and
J. Coleman Dempsey, grand knrght,
presided.
Mr. Flaherty left Augusta Tuesday
for New Orleans, San Antonio, and
Mexico, where he will visit Councils
of the Order.
Regular Georgia Barbecue
Arranged For Directors
The hoard of directors of the
Knights of Columbus now know what
is meant by a real Georgia barbecue;
they were guests of honor at one
sponsored by the Knights of Augusta
at Forrest Hills Lodge Saturday,
January 9. Grand Knight J. Coleman
Dempsey presided, and Capt. P. H.
Rice, a member of the board, intro
duced the members of the board. The
girls of the Marjo Club served the
barbecue, which was under the di
rection of Clem Castleberry. Captain
Rice headed the barbecue commit
tee. The only address, one responding
to the words of welcome, was made
by Martin H. Carmody of Grand
Rapids, Mich., deputy supreme
knight, in the absence of Supreme
Knight Flaherty, who was confined
to the hotel with a cold.
Among those present a t the barbe
cue were Mr. and Mrs. Carmody, W.
J. McGinley, New Haven, supreme
secretary; Dr. Edward W. Fahey, St.
Paul, supreme physician; Luke E.
Hart, St. Louis, supreme advocate;
Mr. and Mrs. John Reddin, Denver;
John F. O’Neil. Jersey City; Wil
liam C. Prout, Boston; Francis P.
Matthews. Omaha; William F. Fox,
Indianapolis; Leo F. Craig, Sioux
Falls, S. D.; Mr. and Mrs. James W.
Gibbons, Topeka, Kan.; John F. Mar
tin. Green Bay, Wis.; Thos. Duffy,
Columbus, O.; Chas. P. McAlevy,
Pawtucket, R. I.; Daniel A. Tobin,
New York; Edward L. Hearn, past
Supreme Knight and now in charge
of the work for boys at Rome; Bro
ther Barnabas, a member of the na
tional executive board of the Boy
Scouts; Fred Milan of St. Paul, su
preme agent of the Knights of Co
lumbus; A. E. Martin manager of
the Bon Air-Vanderbilt; visiting
knights from various South Carolina
and Georgia Councils, and nearly
one hundred and fifty local knights
and their ladies.
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