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EIGHT
THE bulletin of the catholic
LAYMEN’S ASSOCIATION OF GEORGIA
AUGUST 22, 1936
Marriages
p-
GAUDIN -REYNOLDS
CONVENT, La.—Miss Gladys Gau
din, daughter of Mrs. L. A. Gaudin
and the late Dr. Gaudin, members
of distinguished Louisiana families,
and J. B. Reynolds, Jr., of Atlanta, a
member of leading Georgia families,
were united in marriage here re
cently, the marriage being solemniz
ed with a Nuptial Mass. After the
wedding trip Mr. and Mrs. Rey
nolds will live in Atlanta, where Mr.
Reynolds, a graduate of Georgia
Tech, is engaged in business.
□-
SHOKES-LEADER
’S
-□
NIAGARA FALLS, N. Y.—The
Rev. Father M. King of Sacred Heart
Church here officiated at the mar
riage of Miss Susie Shokes, formerly
of Savannah and Charleston, S. C.,
and Fred W. Leader of Niagara
Falls. After the wedding trip
through Canada, Mr. and Mrs.
Shokes will live in Niagara Falls.
I
MORROW-McDONOUGH
SAVANNAH, Ga.—The Very Rev.
D. J. McCarthy, V. F., pastor of the
Church of the Holy Family, Colum
bus, officiated at the marriage at
Blessed Sacrament Church here of
Miss Sara Katherine Morrow, daugh
ter of Mr. and Mrs. Andrew J. Mor
row, and William C. McDonough,
son of Mrs. H. McC. McDonough and
the late W. C. McDonough, members
of leading Savannah families. The
ceremony was solemnized at a Nup
tial Mass of which Father McCarthy,
uncile of the groom, was celebrant.
After thei rwedding breakfast, Mr.
and Mrs. McDonough left on a wed
ding trip to the North; they will live
in Savannah where Mr. McDonough,
a graduate or Spring Hill College,
is located in business.
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Catholic Charities Meeting
Closes Sessions at Seattle
James Fitsgerald of Detroit
President—St. Paul 1937
Conference City
ACCIDENT FATAL TO
MRS. RUSSaL SNOW
SEATTLE.—James Fitzgerald, of
Detroit, executive secretary of the
Society of St. Vincent de Paul since
1919, was selected president of the
National Conference of Catholic
Charities at the annual convention
held here. The Conference will meet
next year in St. Paul, in Richmond
in 1938 and in San Francisco in 1939.
Mr. Fitzgerald succeeds the Rev.
John J. Butler, of St. Louis.
Other officers named were: the
Rev Lawrence F. Ryan, St. Paul;
Mrs. Herbert Fisher, Hartford; the
Rev. William C. Keane, Albany, and
Miss Teresa R. O’Donohue, New
York City, vice presidents; the Rt.
Rev. Msgr. John O’Grady, Washing
ton, D. C., secretary, and Thomas F.
Farrell, New York City, treasurer.
The executive committe chosen
comprises the Rt. Rev. Msgr. R. Mar-
cellus Wagner, Cincinnati; Mrs. Leon
G. Finck, Detroit; the Rev. Bryan
G. McEntegart, New York City; the
Very Rev. Msgr. John R. ' Mulroy,
Denver, and Miss Regina O’Connell,
Chicago.
Blessing and guidance of Almighty
God was invoked for the conference
at Solemn Pontifical Mass offered in
St. James Cathedral. The Most Rev.
Edward D. Howard, Archbishop of
Portland in Oregon, pontificated and
the Most Rev. Gerald Shaugnessy, S.
M., Bishop of Seattle, preached the
sermon. A score of Archbishops and
Bishops were in the sanctuary and
priests and nuns and delegates occu
pied the 1,500 seats in the Cathedral,
while other delegates assisted at an
other Mass in the Cathedral hall.
□ □
| STEWARDS OF WEALTH |
□ □
“The Catholic has been taught,”
Bishop Shaughnessy said, “to realize,
and this in a most concrete manner,
that as possesor of this world’s goods
he is but the steward of his Creator.
Superfluous wealth, therefore, by the
command of Christ and under the
direction of the Church was neces
sarily set apart as God’s portion to
be distributed to those less favored
in a material way.”
“We will not encourage anything
in the way of extravagance or
waste. We will want to foster initia
tive and self-reliance,” said Father
Butler. “Those charged with admin
istration of the new public welfare
programs must regard themselves as
the servants not only of the under
privileged but also of the people as
a whole.”
The first general session of the
Conference was held in the Seattle.
Civic Auditorium. Bishop Shaugh-'
nessy, Governor Clarence D. Martin
of Washington and Mayor John F.
Dore voiced the cordial welcome of
the state and community to the dele
gates. The Rev. John J. Butler, of St.
Louis, preident of the National Con
ference, made his presidential report
and the Most Rev. C. Hubert Le-
Blond, Bishop of St. Joseph, deliver
ed the keynote address on ‘The Fu
ture of Private Social Work”.
Husband of Former Savan-
nahian Also Dies in Florida
(Special to The Bulletin)
SAVANNAH, Ga.—The funeral of
Mrs. Russell G. Snow, of Fort Lau
derdale, Fla., who was killed in an
automobile accident at Vero Beach
in which her husband sustained in
juries from which he also later died,
was held from Sacred Heart Church
here with a Requiem Mass, the Very
Rev. Boniface Bauer, O.S.B., officiat
ing. Interment was in Laurel Grove
Cemet;ry. Mrs. Snow was formerly
Miss Stella Douglas of this city, a
member of a leading Savannah Cath
olic family; she had been living in
Fort Lauderdale for some time and
was on her way with her husband
to North Carolina on a vacation trip
at the time of the accident.
TIMOTHY HICKEY, a native of
Macon, died here late in July after
a long illness. Mr. Hickey had lived
in Savannah for years; his nephew,
E. T. Fenelon, survives him. The re
mains were sent to Macon for the fu
neral services at St. Joseph’s Church
there; interment was in Macon.
VICTOR C. LOMEL, a member of
Cathedral parish, died late in July in
Chicago, where he had gone on bus
iness. Mr. Lomel was a native of In
dianapolis and was 49 years old. The
funeral was held from the Cathedral
with interment in Cathedral Ceme
tery. Surviving Mr. Lomel are his
wife, Mrs. Estelle Lomel; two sisters,
two brothers, three nieces and a
nephew.
ANTONIO GONZALES, a member
of Cathedral parish, died late in July.
Mr. Gonzales was a retired member
of the United States Coast Guard
Service. The funeral was held from
the Cathedral with interment in Bona-
venture Cemetery.
JOSEPH I. WILKINS, widely
known in Savannah, died here early
m August at the age of 34. Mr. Wil
kins is survived by his wife, Mrs.
Carolyn Wilkins, his infant daugh
ter, his mother, Mrs. Annie Wilkins,
and his sister, Mrs. Harry J. Middle-
ton. The funeral was held from the
Cathedral of St. John the Baptist,
with interment in Cathedral Ceme
tery.
TEMPERANCE UNION
HOLDS CONVENTION
Q
-□
I SOCIAL WORK MOTIVE I
□ □
“The future of private social work
is to rebuild the souls of men; to use
all power it can muster in family
welfare, child care, character build
ing, recreation; to build anew the
spirit we once knew and that has
departed from millions of our citi
zens,” the Most Rev. C. Hubert Le-
Blond, Bishop of St. Joseph, said in a
keynote address that thrilled 15,000
persons assembled in the Seattle
Civic Auditorium at the opening of
the Conference.
“Whether we wish it or not, caring
for the needy and welfare or our
people is a recognized function of
the Government to which no Admin
istration in the future will be allow
ed to close its eyes,” said Bishop Le-
Blond.
“It is not enough to put bread in
stomachs. It is the job of private so
cial work to build anew the souls of
men. Yours the opportunity to re
build the spirit of the nation, to cre
ate a new idealism in America, where
an aristocracy of service will replace
the aristocracy of wealth. You who
are working in Catholic agencies in
social work remember that anything
less than best in your profession is
unworthy of Him Whose banner you
hold aloft.”
□ □
l THE CHRISTIAN SPIRIT i
□ □
Without a profound renewal of the
Christian spirit, “legislative tinker
ing with our social and economic
machinery will not avert a class war
in America,” the Rev. Bryan J. Mc
Entegart, of New York, asserted.
“Fust and foremost,” he declared,
“it is to the everlasting credit of
America that during the last six
years she has poured out billions of
dollars in relief to save the spirit
and homes of the unemployed. There
has been no serious question but
that, as a people, we have been will
ing to tax ourselves and to go into
debt, that the homes of those honest
ly in want might be preserved . . .
“After all, stability in society is
founded on men’s consciences. The
outstanding evil of our age is that
our age has lost the sense of sin.
Conscience is no longer the voice of
God. The modem world found that
God’s laws interfered with its prac
tices and man became a law unto
himself. In this philosophy we have
brought up several generations of
Americans. Our homes and schools
have acted as if knowledge and rea
son were sufficient guides in life,”
Cardinal Dougherty Spiritual
Director of Catholic Total
Abstinence Society
THE PARTICULAR Conference of
the St. Vincent de Paul Society,
composed of the Immaculate Con-
caption. Sacred Heart and St. An
thony’s Conferences, Atlanta received
Communion in a body at St. An
thony’s Church July 19, the Feast
of St. Vincent de Paul. This was the
quarterly Communion Sunday of the
society.
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(By N. C. W. C. News Service)
HARTFORD, Conn. — The Rev.
Daniel S. Coonahan, pastor of St.
Callistus Church, Philadelphia, was
reelected president of the Catholic
Total Abstinence Union of America
in the closing sessions of the organ
ization’s sixty-fifth annual conven
tion, just held here.
The other officers of the Union
were also .reelected. They are:
His Emminence Dennis Cardinal
Dougherty, Archbishop of Philadel-
S hia, spiritual director; Thomas H.
folan, of Pittsfield, Mass., first
vice-president; Mrs. Mary B. Finan,
of Chicago, second vice-president;
Mrs. Louise M. Ryan, of Malden,
Mass., third vice-president; Henry
J. Healey, of Torrington, Conn.,
treasurer; John A. Pfister, of Sha
ron Hill, Pa., general secretary, and
the Rt. Rev. Msgr. B. S. Canaty, of
Pittsfield, Mass., president of the
Priests’ League.
About 125 delegates from all parts
of the United States attended the
three-day convention. The visitors
were welcomed the first evening of
the convention by the Rt. Rev. Msgr.
Thomas S- Duggan, Vicar General
of the Diocese of Hartford, at an in
formal rally, over which Father
Coonahan presided.
AUGUSTA PAGEANT TO
DEPICT HISTORY OF
ST. JOSEPH SISTERS
AUGUSTA, Ga. — One hundred
years of stirring service to Church
an dnation by the Sisters of St. Jo
seph in the United States will be de
picted in a great pageant to be pre
sented here at Mount St. Joseph in
October. The pageant, written by the
Rev. John J. Kennedy and which wtll
be presented under his direction, will
start with the coming of the Sisters
from France to Carondolet near St.
Louis, and will carry the story down
to the present day through the his
tory of the Sisters in the Diocese of
Savannah. Rehearsals have already
been star ted, _
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