Newspaper Page Text
AUGUST 5, 1933
THE BULLETIN OF THE CATHOLIC L AYMEN’S ASSOCIATION OF GEORGIA
SEVEN
NEWS BRIEFS
From The N. C. W. C. News Service
ARCHBISHOP HANNA, Mayor
Rossi and other San Francisco not
ables were speakers at the fiftieth
anniversary of the Young Men’s In
stitute and the Young Ladies’ Insti
tute, pioneer Catholic organizations
for the young.
THE KEV. MATHIAS HELFEN of
the Catholic Dramatic Movement,
Milwaukee, has recently had publish
ed his “Sacred Drama of the Mys
teries,” dealing with the Sacrifice of
the Mass.
NOTRE DAME UNIVERSITY’S re
treat movement has grown from one
retreatant in 1318 to 1,000 last year;
and even larger attendance is antici
pated at the 1S33 retreat, to be held
in August.
THE VERY REV. OPTATUS LOEF-
FLER, O. S., superior of the Francis
can Fathers at Quincy, 111., for ten
years, has been chosen provincial of
the Order of the Middle Western
Province.
THE REV. HENRI HUMBERT-
CLAUDE, S. M., provincial of the
Marist in Japan, is passing through
the United States on his way to the
general chapter of the Order in
France in August.
THE REV. FRANCIS BORGIA
STECK, O. F. M., and his brother,
-the Rev. Athanese Steck, O. F. M.,
were officers of the Requiem Mass at
St. Louis at the Funeral of their
father, Bernard R. Steck. Mr. Steck
.was also the father of a nun, the Rev.
Sister M. Sybilla, O. S. F.
THE REV. RICHARD CORCORAN,
S. J., for many years a member of
faculties of Jesuit colleges in the
West, observed his golden jubilee as
a Jesuit at Cincinnati July 23.
THE CATHOLIC PRESS ASSOCIA
TION through Simon Baldus, man
aging editor of Extenison Magazine
and former president of the C. P. A.,
at its recent convention in Chicago
aent this telegram to Thomas Joseph
Eeid, Augusta, Ga., who was twenty-
four hours old when the convention
opened; “In the name of all the
members of the Catholic Press Asso
ciation in attendance at its twenty-
third annual conventionVand presided
over by your daddy, I send you
greetings. Please convey to your
wonderful mother our heartfelt con
gratulations and we ask the fullest
abundance of God's blessings on you
both.”
EDWIN J. OWENS, professor of law
at Boston College, will become acting
dean of the University of Santa Clara
Law School in California in August.
Professor Owens is a graduate of Holy
Cross College and Harvard University
Law School.
BROTHER CYPRIAN, C. S. C„ for
thirty-six years a member of the
faculty of Notre Dame University, ob
served the golden jubilee of the pro
fession of his vows in the brother
hood of the Congregation of the Holy
Cross July 22.
BISHOP GERKEN,. of Amarillo,
Texas, will be installed as Archbishop
of Santa Fe August 23, with His Ex
cellency, the Apostolic Delegate, of
ficiating.
MICHAEL O’SHAUGHNESSY, a
leader in the Crusade for Social Just
ice, announces that the movement has
received Episcopal endorsement in
three more Dioceses, Fort Wayne, Los
Angeles and Ogdensburg, a total of
43 in the United States and Canada.
ST. PATRICK’S SHELTER in San
Francisco has given lodgings to 59,624
men during the first six months of
1933, and many of them were assisted:
in other ways. Since its opening in
1927, 453,373 men have been sheltered
there.
THE REV. LAURENCE J. KENNY,
S. J., for thirty years a member of
the faculty of St. Louis University, on
July 21 observed the fiftieth anni
versary of his entering the Jesuit
Order. Father Kenny, now visiting
St. Louis, has been a member of the
faculty of the University of Detroit
for the past two years.
SOUTHERN FINANCE CORPORATION
AUGUSTA, GEORGIA
Real Estate and Renting
We Specialize in Furnished Homes.
Southern Finance Building
GEORGIA STATE COUNCIL
KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUS
Louis C. ICunze, Columbus, State Deputy
A. A. Baumstark, Atlanta, Past State Deputy
Jos. I. Oberst, Atlanta, State Secretary
James F. Glass, Savannah, State Advocate
Jos. F. O’Brien, Brunswick, State Treasurer
John T. Buckley, Augusta, State Warden
Rev. Thomas A. Brennan, Albany, State Chaplain
ATLANTA COUNCIL
No. 660
C. L. McGowan, Grand Knight
67# Spring St.. N. W.
J. I. Oberst. Financial Secretary
1431 Beecher Street. S. W
Charles R. Cannon. Recorder
120# Peachtree. N. E.
Meets Every Monday. 8 p. m.. at
120# Peachtree N E
Business Meeting First and
Third Mondays.
SAVANNAH COUNCIL
No. 631
Win. T. Walsh, Grand Knight
J. B. McDonald
Financial Secretary.
A. R. Winkers, R. S.
Meets Second and Fourth
Wednesday. 8 P. M.
3 West Liberty Street
Savannah. Ga.
Bishop Gross Council
No. 1019
LOUIS C. KUN7.E
Grand Knight.
JOS. J. SPANO
Financial Secretary.
Meets First and Third Wednes
day, 8:04 P. M„ Columbus Hall.
18 Twelfth Street
COLUMBUS. GA.
Patrick Walsh Council
No. 677
J. COLEMAN DEMPSEY
Grand Knight.
R. S. Ileslin. Financial Secretary
New Club Home—Handball—
Showers—Radio.
Visiting Brothers Welcome
1012 Greene St. Augusta. Ga
Macon Council, No. 923
John E. Harrison, Grand
Knight.
Martin J. Caliagan, Financial
Secretary.
Meets the First and
Third Monday, 8:15 p. m.
at Knights of Columbus
Hall.
Mulberry St.. Macon. Ga
Henry Thomas Ross
Council, No. 1939
JAMES M. JONES
Grand Knight.
JOS. P. O’BRIEN. Jr.
Recording Secretary.
G. CECIL JONES
Financial Secretary.
Meets Second and Fourth
Tuesdays at Knights of
Columbus Halt
BRUNSWICK. GA.
A. O. H. IN FIFTY-EIGHTH
CONVENTION IN CHICAGO
Michael W. Delaney Re
elected President
CHICAGO.—The Ancient Order of
Hibernians, at the concluding ses
sion of its fifty-eighth national con
vention chose Baltimore as the 1935
convention city.
Michael W. Delaney, Chicago, was
re-lected national president for the
next biennium, Leo Kelly, Pittsburgh,
national secretary, and Thomas J.
Finnegan, Jersey City, national treas
urer, also were re-elected, as was
Michael Donohoe, Philadelphia na
tional chairman of the Irish history
activity.
The new vice-presidents are John
A. Fenton, Lawrence, Mass., and John
E. Powers, Halifax, who serves as
Canadian vice-president.
Martin L. Sweeney, former national
president, was re-elected to the board
of directors, along with Thomas J.
Welsh, Baltimore; John H. Greene,
Jr., Newport, R. I.; and John O’Ha
gan, Brooklyn; Vacancies in the di
rectorate were filled by the election
of William Kingston, Milwaukee, and
John H. McNamara, Ansonia, Conn.
The Most Rev. J. J. Glennon, D. D.,
Archbishop of St. Louis, is National
Chaplain.
Greetings and good wishes were
sent to the Holy Father and to
President Roosevelt by the Ancient
Order of Hibernians and the Ladies’
Auxiliary during the convention.
The visitors were addressed by the
Most Rev. James A. Griffin, Bishop of
Springfield, in Illinois, who is State
Chaplain, and began their confer
ences with a Pontifical High Mass at
Holy Name Cathedral. Later in the
week they .gathered at St. Patrick’s
Church at a requiem Mass for de
ceased members.
Delegates were reminded of the re
markable record made by the A. O.
H. and the Ladies’ Auxiliary in the
matter of contributing to activities
of the church and in commemorating
deeds of Catholics, in the various
committee and other reports. Among
the contributions that the organiza
tions have made are the endowment
of a chair -of Celtic Language at
Catholic University, Washington, D.
C„ an estimated contribution of $20,-
000 to the Catholic Church Extension
Society, contribution of $50,000 for the
Irish College at Rome, and the erec
tion of the Nuns’ Monument in Wash
ington a scholarship in Trinity Col
lege, Washington, and the erection of
a marble altar in honor of St. Brigid
in the National Shrine of the Im
maculate Conception at Washington,
the laree contributions coming from
the auxiliary.
A more recent activity is the cam
paign to introduce the study of Irish
history in parochial schools. It was
reported at the convention that mueh
headway in this matter has been
made in the Province of Quebec.
Protestant Scores
Anti-Catholic Bias
Not a Catholic Among
Teachers in Pennsylvania
City
(By N. C. W. C. News Service)
PITTSBURGH.—The display of big
otry in the selection of teachers for
the Wilkinsburg public school sys
tem was denounced at a meeting of
the Wilkinsburg Taxpayers’ Associa
tion by Rex Newton, an officer of the
association and a member of the First
Presbyterian Church.
Addressing the meeting, Mr. New
ton said: “I want to stop this whisper
ing campaign once and for all, and
I’m going to say things that will
make the intolerant bigots of this
community wince. Of 200 or more
teachers in the Wilkinsburg public
school system, not one is of the Cath
olic Faith. Let’s be fair—if we ex
empt Catholics from teaching in our
schools, then let us exempt them
from paying taxes to support those
schools.”
127 DEGREES were awarded at the
summer commencement at Notre
Dame University, one doctorate, 63
masters, and 63 bachelors’ degrees.
A PLEA to President Roosevelt to
retain the religious ferver he dem
onstrated in taking office is voiced
in a recent issue of Our Sunday
Visitor, published at Huntington,
Ind.
Miss Marie Grady’s
Death Is Deplored
Savannah Press Editorially
Laments Her Passing
(From The Savannah Press)
"The tragic death of Miss Marie
Grady on Sunday has been the cause
of much sorrow to her friends in Sa
vannah and in other cities where she
was known and loved. Miss Grady,
a native of this city, had done much
tor others during the years of her
activity. She had served unselfish
ly and well in numerous spheres
and had met many situations brave
ly and successfully that might have
discouraged a less courageous soul.
“Endowed with the talents of a
true artist, Miss Grady in her young
er days taught art for a short time in
the public schools. Here she made
her influence felt in a most encour
aging and helpful way. She left an
impress in this work that has not,
even after this long period, been ef
faced. Later, she took on a more
extended service in which she came
in closer contact with the public.
And in this departure she placed
herself in a position to widen her
scope of activity for good.
“But while Miss Grady was an art
ist and business woman, it was in
her more intimate life—that of the
family and the home—in which her
most appreciated work was probably
dene. Here she found much to do—
and did it cheerfully and with hap
piness which brings joy to those
blessed by the benevolence of the
giver and equal happiness to those
she serves because of the joy she
found in aiding others.
Possessed of a nature that was un
selfish and deeply charitable, and
endowed with a desire to make those
about her happy through her ability
to aid, Miss Grady carved for her
self in a modest way a scroll upon
which might be read the story of a
life of devotion to those she loved
and . of accomplishments through
which others benefited.
“Added to her other virtues, which
made of her an unselfish agency for
good, was the deeply religious and
God-fearing side of her life. In her
daily contact with her associates In
other capacities she never failed to
remember her obligation to the
Omnipotent One. Here she found
■ that guidance and direction which
makes it possible to say of her as
has been said of another: “Death has
left her only the beautiful.” And
her friends find consolation in her
passing in recalling that it has been
declared:
“ ‘Death’s but a path that must
be trod
If man would ever pass to God.’ ”
Atlanta Business Guide
FIXZIT
SYSTEM
Plumbing Heating
Repairs
Wal 7226
68 Hunters St. S. W.
Across the Street, Immaculate
Conception Church.
RAYMOND
BLOOMFIELD
Catholic Funeral Director
Secretary Sam Greenberg
and Co.
95 Forrest Ave. N. E.
Atlanta, Ga.
Piedmont Laundry
“A Service to Suit Your Needs’
DRY CLEANING
Quality and Service
COLD STORAGE
for Furs and Winter Garments
RUGS and DRAPERIES
CLEANED or DYED
Phone WAL 7651
120 Trinity Ave, S. W.
LITHOGRAPHING
PRINTING
OFFICE SUPPLIES
JOHN H. HARLAND CO.
Plant—Highland Ave at Jackson
Retail Store—8 Pryor St.
Atlanta, Ga.
Church Directory
Immaculate Conception
Church. Rev. Jos. E. Moylan,
pastor, Masses: Sundays, 7, 8,
9:3#. 11:15. Daily. 7.
Sacred Heart, Rev. Edward
McGrath. S. M„ pastor.
Masses: Sundav, 7. 8:30. 9:30,
10:30. Daily. 6:30. 7, 8.
St. Anthony's, Rev. H. F.
Clark, pastor. Masses: Sun
day. 7. 9:36. Daily, 7, 8.
Our Lady ot Lourdes. Rev.
Peter Weiss, S. M. A., pastor.
Sunday Masses: 7. 10. Daily.
Brandon - Bond -
Condon
FUNERAL DIRECTORS
300 Peachtreet St., N. E
Phone HE. 6001
JAMES J. CONDON,
Secretary
Dressing in good taste is not co
much a money-matter as it is a
matter of deciding to keep in con
stant touch with the Muse styles.
This store will dress you excellent
ly. and never exceed vour budget
George Muse Clothing Co.
Peachtree-Walton-Broad
ROOFING HEATING
WATERPROOFING
A Georgia organized and Geor
gia owned firm.
'■Twenty-seven years experience.
Amalgamated Roofing Materials.
Warm Air Furnace, furnace
Repairs
Responsibility counts.
Walnut 5747. Terms if desired.
CHAS. N. WALKER
ROOFING COMPANY
141 Houston St.
Atlanta, Georgia
MYERS-DICKSON
FURNITURE CO.
154-156 WHITEHALL, S. W.
ATLANTA
“Where Good Furniture Is Not
Expensive”
ATLANTA LOCK AND KEY
COMPANY
Safes Opened and Repaired
Lawn Mowers Sharpened
Mail Your Leeks and Keys to
978 Peachtree Street
Atlanta. Ga.
Hemlock 6239-0231
N I R A Act will compel the price of
Coal to advance. You can still save a lot
by buying now. Get the best—from
W. D. HARDAWAY COAL CO.
834 Lee St., 25 Hunter St., S. E., Raymond 3700
1700 Boulevard, N. E., 1165 Bankhead, N. W., Wal 3808
RED-FLASH GASOLINE
(72 OCTANE)
From Railroad Tank Car to User—No Warehousing—
No Trucking—The Saving Is Yours.
REED PETROLEUM COMPANY
(Quality Products Since 1912)
Peachtree at Brook wood.