Newspaper Page Text
MAY 31. 1929
THE BULLETIN OF THE CATHOLIC LAYMEN’S ASSOCIATION OF' GEORGIA
Missionary Servants, Founded in
Alabama, Canonically Erected
(Continued from page 1)
tion'ot the Faith. This monthly
magazine tells its readers ot the
needs of the community and ap
peals for workers to labor on the
abandoned home missions.
Discussing the receipt of news
of approval of the community at
Rome, Father Tomerlin said: First
of all we want publicly to thank
our Holy Father, who through the
Sacred Congregation has blessed
and approved our "work and in the
same breath we want to pledge
anew our fealty and devotion ol
Christ’s Vicar on earth. We must
not forget the real paternal inter
est His Excellency, the Apostolic
Delegate, Msgr. Fumasoni Biondi
has always manifested and. at the
same time we most sincerely thank
him and Msgr. Filippo Bernardini
of the faculty of the Catholic Uni-
versity of America.
prominent part in our present ac-
tivities for the Preservation of the
Faith.
“The work, for the Preservation
of the Faith, began as a lay apos-
tolate and the recognition of the
directing force, the community of
priests and .brothers, will serve to
add authority to its efforts.”
Six urgent invitations have been
received by Father Judge to come
into parishes and organize active
missionary participation of laymen
and laywomen, Father Tomerlin
announced.
Bishop Hafev called attention to
the fact that North Carolina ranks
as the most un-C’atholic State in
the Union in point of Catholic in
habitants, and expressed the belief
that holding the convention there
would have a stimulating effect. It
was announced that Baltimore,
which had previously asked for
the convention, would waive Its re
quest if Asheville were selected.
“The Rt. Rev. Bishop Toolen of
Mobile has also shown more than
a fatherly interest in our work and
certainly he must be included
among our greatest benefactors
and well-wishers. Then, I do not
want to stand convicted of ingrat
itude toward our numerous Bishop,
Priest, Sister and lay benefactors.
They are remembered ten times
every day by all of our students in
their visits to the Most Blessed
Sacrament and all our priests,
through me, promise them a daily
remembrance in our Masses.”
In explanation of this latest
Home Mission endeavor, Father
Tomerlin said:
“The Missionary Servants of the
Most Holy Trinity are being or
ganized in the hope that they may
be useful to Holy Mother Church
on our abandoned Home Missions
—the Missions of the South espe
cially—and we plan to work both
for white and colored. Remember,
I however, that the word ‘abandoned’
rin our home mission work used does
not apply to definite localities. In or-
’ der to undertake useful works with
any hope of success we must ap
peal to the large centers of estab
lished Catholicity for vocations —
for boys and young men to volun
teer as workers.
“These volunteers, in turn, must
be supported during their long
term of studies while preparing
themselves to become missionary
priests or missionary brothers. To
procure this neded assistance we
expect to make ourselves useful in
the crowded sections of the. larger
Catholic centers by doing Boy
Work. The Boy Work is a prob
lem in which we are vitally inter
ested and about which we have
busied ourselves. It holds the most
Father Judge also is the founder
of the Missionary Servants- of the
Most Blessed Trinity, a community
of Sisters which now numbers
about 300 members. The Sisters
also were established to work for
the Preservation of the Faith and
now have 30 Missionary Circles.
Two more are to be opened this fall
—one in Boston and another in
Hartford—from which the Sisters
go out daily in their efforts to call
the erring back to the practice of
their faith. Father Judge is now
working on the rule of the Sisters
and before long, it is' hoped, the
announcement of their approval in
Rome will be announced.
C. P,
A. Literary Prizes
for 1928 Announced
NON-CATHOLiC CALLS
VATICAN PEACE CENTER
(Continued from Page 1)
monweal; “Must Catholics Never
Resent Insult,” an editorial by
Michael J. Madigan in The Catholic
News of New York and “Home and
Foreign”, an editorial by the Rev.
Patrick O’Connor in The Far East
of St. Columbans, Neb., were the
other entries considered by the
board of final judges. .
The prize of $50 for the best article
airpearing in a Catholic publication
last year lias been awarded to the
Rev. Joseph P. Conroy, S..T., for The
Lecturer and the Coach,” which ap
peared in the September, 1928, issue
of The Catholic World.
• Other articles considered in this
group by the final judges were: “So I
Went to England,” by Viola S. O'Con
nell in The Catholic Woman of De
troit; “The Brown Derby,” by the
Rev. Leonard Feeney, S.J., in Am
erica; “The Protestant Ambition to
Rune the Country,” by Eugene Weare
in Extension Magazaine, and “Post-
Election Thoughts." by Patrick F.
Scanlan in The Tablet of Brooklyn.
The $25 prze for the best poem has
been awarded to the Rev. Hugh 1‘ •
Blunt for his work. “Till Love Re
turns,” published in the January,
1928,- issue of The Messenger of the
Sacred Heart.
Other poems considered by the^ final
judges in this division were: “Varia
tions of an Old Theme,” by William
Thomas Walsh in America; 'White
Secrets,” by Daniel Sargent in The
Commonweal: "Where She Has
Been,” by Mary Dixon Thayer in The
Miraculous Medal published in Phil
adelphia, and “The Annunciation,
by Rosemary Iv. "Beattie in The Cath
olic Woman of Detroit, Mich.
The preliminary judges in the con
test for awards to the authors of
books were: the Rev. Wilfrid Parsons, j
S.J., editor of America; Sister M. ,
Ignatia, editor of The Magnificat;!
Patrick F. Scanlan of The Tablet, j
Brooklyn; Beatrice Gaule and Joseph .
J. Quinn of The Southwest Courier,
the editorial staff of The Common
weal and the editorial staff of The
Catholic World. ]
The final judges were:
Croup A—Fiction: Mary Synon, j
Nellie Nevin Delaney and George N.
Shuster. —
Group B—Religion: the Rt. l.ev.
Francis C. Kelley, Bishop of Okla
homa; Elizabeth Jordan and Dr.
James J. Walsh.
Group C—General: Sister Mary
Madeleva. Brother .Leo and the Rev.
E. F. Murphy, S.S.J.
WINONA, M in n. — Minnesota
Council of Catholic Women has
gained 2,500 members in six
months, it was reported at the sec
ond annual spring conference here
in May.
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AUGUSTA SHOPPING GUIDE
(Continued from Page I)
I
temporal power of other days, and
that ‘ there should be no temptation
for its exercise by his successors. ,
And it is because of this reunica
tion that Italy recognizes the City
of the Vatican as ‘neutral and in
violable.’
THE BULLETIN
Urges its readers to
patronize
its advertisers.
CHARLOTTE COUNCIL NO. 770,
KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUS
CHARLOTTE, N. C.
Meets First and Third Tuesday.
C. A. Williams, Grand Knight
E. L. Pennell, Fin. Sec’y.
“But this is not all. The Holy
Father declares his intention not to
involve himself in the temporal dis
putes of other Powers. This would
seem to be a sufficient renuncia
tion of the exercise- of territorial
power, but the treaty goes further,
the Pope declaring it to be his in
tention not to take part in interna
tional gatherings, assemblies or
conferences where questions of
temporal power are considered by
parties in controversy, unless those
parties shall unanimously appeal
to him in his capacity of mediator.
He expressly reserves, however, the
exercise of his moral and spiritual,
as distinct from temporal power.”
Then, making his declaration
concerning the possibility of the
Vatican becoming the center of
mediation, the speaker added:
‘‘Many there are still living, who
recall how Leo XIII as Supreme
Pontiff, dispossessed of his terri
tory and exercising only moral and
spiritual functions, was able to
mediate between Germany and
Spain in the matter of the Caro
lines—not merely between coun
tries of the faithful, but between
Catholic and Protestant Powers.
“Not the least important impli
cation of the treaty is the prospect
which it offers the Powers of a
solution of their conflicts upon the
basis of law, morality, and the im
ponderables, without an eye to
territorial aggrandisement or tem
poral interests on the part of the
mediator.”
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DETROIT EDITOR AGAIN
PRESIDENT OF C. P. A.
(Continued from Page 1)
Hart, Editor of The Catholic Tele
graph, Cincinnati, and Simon A.
Baldcs, Managing Editor of The
Extension Magazine, Chicago, were
re-elected members of the Board of
Directors.
New York Life
Insurance Co. '
New Policy
It pays you if you live ..$10,000
Pays your family when
you die $10,000
Accidental death,
pays cash $10,000
Plus $100 each month for 10
years for mother, wife and chil
dren, or $22,000.,
If disabled thru sickness or ac
cident, pays a life income of
$100 each month.
Also pays all premiums for you
and pays dividends regularly.
Matt. C. Carroll
Georgia Agent
000 Haas Howell Bldg-, Atlanta.
Patrick F. Scanlan, Managing
Editor of The Tablet, Brooklyn,
and the Rev. Edward J. Ferger,
Editor and Manager of The Catho
lic Union and Times, Buffalo, wen?
chosen to serve with the President
of the Association on the re-named
News Service Bureau. The Rev.
Wilfrid Parsons, S. J. Editor of
America, New York; Richard Reid,
Editor of The Bulletin, Augusta,
Ga., and John F. McCormick of The
Commonwealth, New York, were
reelected the members of the Lit
erature Bureau. The Rev. Charles
J. Mullaly, S. J„ Editor of The Mes
senger of the Sacred Heart, was re
elected the Advertising Bureau,
with Claude M. Becker, Business
Manager of The Tablet, and E.
Lester Muller, Business Manager of
the Baltimore Catholic Review, as
the other two .members.
The Rev. Francis P. LeBuffe, S,
J., of America, is to head the Cir
culation Vigilance Committee
which (was given this new name
by Action of the convention) for
the year as Chairman, with John
Harney of The Christian Family,
Techny. 111., as secretary-treasurer.
Bernard Vaughan, Managing Fill-,
tor of The Catholic Bulletin, St.
Paul, was added to the Committee
The other members are the Rev. Al
fred Hermann, O. F. M., of St. An
thony's Messenger, Cincinnati; the
Rev Harold Purcell, C. P., of The
Sign, Cincinnati, and James J.
Brady, of The New World, Chica
go. George J. Lillig is Manager of
the Committee’s Central Bureau
whose new address is Room 703
180 West Washington St. Chicago.
At the final session, a letter was
read from the Rt. Rev. William J.
Hafey, Bishop of Raleigh, cordially
inviting the Association to hold its
1930 convention in Asheville, N. C.
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AUGUSTA
Church Directory
ST. PATRICK’S — Rev. H. A.
Schonhardt, Pastor. Masses,
Sundays, 7. 9, 11. Week-days,
6:30. _ .
SACRED HEART, — Rev. .. A.
Cronin, S. J.* Pastor. Masses,
Sundays. 6:30. 8, 10:30. Week
days. 6:30, 7:30.
ST. MARY’S-ON-THE-HILL —
Rev. James A. Kane, Pastor.
Masses, Sunday, 7:30 and 9:30
Daily 7.
IMMACULATE CONCEPTION
—Rev. Alfred Laube, S. M. A.,
Pastor. Masses, Sundays, 7,
9:30.
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