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l HE BULLETIN OF THE CATHOLIC LAYMEN'S ASSOCIATION OF GEORGIA
JUNE 16, 1929
Josephifes Will Open
Catholic II. Seminary
Order Working in South Af
filiates With University
WASHINGTON—The new St.
Joseph’s Seminar of the Josephite
Fathers, which is to be affiliated
with the Catholic University of
America, will be opened on a site
near the university campus here
this October.
Actual construction work on the
magnificent new edifice, which is
to cost approximately $400,00, al
ready has been begun.
When the new St. Josephs Sem
inary here is ready, the mother-
house and novitiate of the Josephite
Fathers will be moved to Wash
ington from Baltimore.
The Rev. T. J. Plunkett, S .S . J.,
who is representing the Josephite
Fathers on the building operations
here, estimates that some 75 sem
inarians will take up quarters in
the first unit of the new Seminary
in October. The seminarians,
he said, will take their studies at
the Catholic University of Am
erica.
UNCOUTH, VULGAR DISPLAY
Walton, Ga., Tribune: A Galves
ton. Texas, Catholic bishop, wrote as
follows to a Vienna, Austria, girl,
who was planning to enter the big
international beauty contest in the
Texas city:
“The pageant is an uncouth, vul
gar display for the purpose of ad
vertising. If you come here you
will be asked to parade in only a
bathing suit before a motley crowd
who will scrutinize you at close
range as they would a beautiful
animal. I cannot see how any
self-respecting or decent young
lady would enter such a contest.”
Mary Nugent McCarthy Mary C. McGouldrick
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AUGUSTA, GEORGIA
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JAPANESE NOBLE TO BE
ORDAINED JESUIT PRIEST
(By N. C. W. C. News Service)
MADRID, Spain.—On July
31, the feast of Saint Ignatius
of Loyola, Father Ogihara, the
first Japanese Jesuit to be
ordained to the Catholic priest
hood for nearly three centuries,
will say his first Mass in the
chapel of Castle Xavier, Na
varre, the birthplace of Saint
Francis Xavier. The Japanese
ambassador will be present at
the Mass.
Father Ogihara belongs to a
pagan family of the Japanese
nobility. He was a student at
the Jesuit University in Tokyo
when he received the grace of
conversion. He has recently
been completing his theologi
cal studies at Innsbruck, in
Austria.
Library Managing Course
Scheduled at Catholic l).
(By N. C. W. C. News Service)
WASHINGTON.—A Six-week intro
ductory course in school library man
agement is to be offered by the Cato-
lic University of America here from
June 29 to August 9, Dr. Roy J. De-
ferrari, director of the Summer Ses
sion, announces.
The course, inaugurated because of
“the significant educational changes
demanding specialized liberary train
ing,” will include the aims, methods,
objectives and minimum essentials for
prospective school librarians. The
students are to be afforded the op
portunity of practical acquaintance
with the work in this connection.
Sister M. Agatha, O.S.U., a special
ist in library science, will give the
course. It will be additional to the
general course in * library science
given by Joseph Schneider, librarian
of the University.
Atlanta Women’s Club
Holds June Meeting
(Special to The Bulletin)
ATLANTA, Ga.—The regular
monthly meeting of the Atlanta
Catholic Club of Business and Pro
fessional Women was held at the
Columbian Club, following supper
served at St. George Apartments,
on the evening of June 4. The
honor guests included Miss Claire
McDonough and her mother. Miss
McDonough is the winner of the
pin awarded by the Club for the
best essay written by a Senior of
the Sacred Heart Parochial School.
The subject chosen by the Club
this year was “Catholic Contribu
tion to American History”. Miss
McDonough read her essajj* most
entertainingly, and her reading was
followed by a few complimentary
remarks by Rev. M. A. Cotter,
S. M. Pastor of the Sacred Heart
Church, another guest at the meet
ing. The pin was presented to Miss
McDonough the following day at
the Cyiass Day exercises of the
school, held at the Woman’c Club
Auditorium.
Belmont Abbey Defeats
Davidson Freshman Nine
I Special to The Bulletin)
BELMONT, N. C. —Belmont Ab
bey nine defeated Davidson College
freshmen here recently, 6 to 1,
and then' took the measure ot
Asheville School for Boys, 14 to 0,
and Mt. Pleasant Cadets, 6 to 1.
Gastonia then defeated Belmont, 3
to 5 and Wingate Junior College de
feated it 6 to 0. Captain Camp
bell pitched a two-hit game against
Asheville. Belmont won five of its
first six games.
The Junior baseball squad is de
finitely on the map here; it de
feated Graham Junior High, 5 to 2
and 2 to 0 in successive weeks, al
though the Graham nine had scor
ed 55 runs in three previous games.
Manlev, Dooley, Campbell and
Whittaker qualified for the semi
finals in the tennis tournament out
of a field of sixteen.
The Piedmont Club banquet was
held at the Charlotte Hotel June
1 at eight o'clock in the evening.
THREE NUNS AND PRIEST
SEE FATHER ORDAINED
(Australian Correspondent. N. C.
W.C. News Service )
MELBOURNE—With his four
children, all of them in religious
life, present, the Rev. Leonard Dew
has jsut been ordained to the
priesthood at Corpus Christi Col
lege. After the death of his wife,
the widower gave up a responsible
position with the Commonwealth
of Australia and took up theological
studies at Beda College, Rome.
The four children present were
the Rev. Wilfred Dew, M. S. C.;
Mother Mary Mildred, Sisters of
Loretto; Mother Mary/of St. Pius.
Order of the Good Shepherd, and
Sister Mary Dolores, Sisters of Our
Lady of the Sacred Heart.
Father Leonard -Dew attended
the Sydney Eucharistic Congress
and completed his studi<*g at Corpus
Christi College. The ordination was
the first held at the college, which
was established in 1923 as a sem
inary for the Archdiocese of Mel
bourne.
There is at least one other case
of a priest in Australia ,o. like
Cardinal Manning, had been married
before becoming a priest. This is
the Rev. D. Davies-Moore, formerly
an Anglican clergyman, who is now
chaplain at the Convent of Mercy,
Bunburv, in the archdiocese of
Perth. Like Father Dew. Father
Davies-Moore staAiedL at Beda Col
lege,
Seven Priests Absolve
in Cleveland Disaster
(By N. C. W. C. News Service.)
CLEVELAND. Ohio — Priests
from St. Agnes', St. TI mas
Aquinas’. St. Aloysius,’ St. Cecelia’s
and Holy Trinity Churches passed
among the dying on the law.i of the
Cleveland clinic here, giving aid
and administering extreme unction,
following the explosion in which
more than 100 persons lost their
lives, yesterday. The priests later
went to the various hospitals, and
conditional absolution was given
to virtually every person.
Msgr. Gilbert P. Jennings, pas
tor of St. Agnes’ Church, situated
within a few blocks of the clinic,
was the fifrst to respond to the call
for aid. His four assistants, the
Rev. Albert J. Murphy, the Rev.
Joseph Walsh, the Rev. Owen Gal
lagher, and the Rev. George White-
head, with the Rev. E. A. Hardy
of St. Cecelia's and the Rev. J. M.
Traps of Holy Trinity assisted in
the work of rescue and relief and
administered to the spiritual needs
of the victims.
Father Murphy also went to the
morgue where a number of the
bodies had been taken and gave
conditional absolution there.
Pat J, Bloomfield
Catholic Funeral Director
Secretary, Sam
Greenberg & Co.
95 Forrest Avenue, N. E.
Atlanta, Ga.
Joseph R. Allen
Special Representative of the
Penn Mutual Life
Insurance Co.
301 Carolina -Life Bldg.
Columbia, S. C.
THOS. S. GRAY BOWDRE P. PHINIZY R. M. RILEY
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