The bulletin (Augusta, Ga.) 1920-1957, August 22, 1936, Image 12

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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. iHC SOUTH'S SUPRCMC HOTCL Bailie Furniture Company The Quality Store Complete House Furnishings 708-710-712 Broadway Augusta, Ga. Male the *ANSLEY owe. yout -@tlci.nta. I Tastefully furnished rooms Beautyrest mattresses Simmons beds Comfortable chairs Restful bed lights Well lighted bathrooms These comforts are yours whether you occupy an ex pensive suite or a minimum priced room. And the same friendly and efficient service goes to EVERY guest. Direction DINKLER HOTELS CO. Incorporated CARLING DINKLER President and Ceneral Manager ■ —i Operating =a The flnsley Atlanta Andrew Jackson nashville Jefferson Davis Montgomery The St. Charles new Orleans The Savannah savannah The Tutwiler pirmincham lllpISg § IEEE IE mat tyyiKaaiitt J EE EE EE EE EE (unfit [tltUUli S EE EE EUfUKKttKKA§58 ir.i: itom ANSLIY, ATLANTA 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. For IRRITATED EYES Relieve, sooth and refresh your eyes. Get real eye comfort. DICKEY’S OiH Reliable EYE WASH Used for 60 years. Genuine in red , box. 25c and 50c a sizes. Ask your | druggist for new | large size with * dropper. Dickey Drug Co., Bristol, Va„ (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, _ “BE READY” This is Henry Ford's Sim pie Formula for Success RIGHT NOW! If you desire to become a secretary, bookkeeper, accountant, or Civil Service employee—if you want a po sition of any kind in a business of fice, let us PREPARE YOU FOR TH E JOB—AID YOU TO GET THE JOB—HELP YOU TO MAKE GOOD ON THE JOB. GEORGIA COMMERCIAL COLLEGE Modern Busisness Training” 10 West North Street, Greenville. S. C. LORETTA A Distinctive School for Boys founded 52 years ago by Rt. Rev. Bishop Moore. Conducted by Sisters of St. Joseph, Junior High, Intermediate and Primary Grades. Extensive Campus, Swimming Pool, Basket Ball, Hand Ball, Football. Small Classes. Special attention given to character building and gentlemanly deportment. Write for Prospectus, Sister Directress, Rt. 6, Box 102, South Jacksonville, Fla. FOODS FRESHER IIIID PURER UIITH ICE lOifaCondittimedL (^puyefcd&on. A new scientific achievement—SIX* SIDED Air-Conditioned REFRIG* ERATION-is acclaimed the greatest advancement for food preservation in the last five years, for these three reasons: (1) Provides 50% greater cool* ing surface. (2) Keeps Vitalized fresh air constantly circulating around stored food. This picks up all odors and impurities, carries them to the melting ice film, where they are ab* sorbed and eliminated through the drain pipe. No interchange of food odors in this refrigerator! (3)-Maintains correct balance of moisture in the air, prevent* ing loss of flavor through dry* ing out of foods. « @/i tlmc/i$Lcnec(' REFRIGERATORS ask YOUR ICi SERVICE MAN* 1911 1936 THE DORMS PLAN BARK Is at a New Address 34 PEACHTREE ST., AT FIVE POINTS ATLANTA OUR NEW building is modem in architecture and appointments. It is air conditioned and arranged for the comfort and convenience of our customers and friends. THE LOCATION is in the hanking and commercial center of Atlanta. You will be pleased with our facili ties for improved service . . . come in to see us. BANKING ON CHARACTER FOR A QUARTER CENTURY DORRIS PLAR BARK OF GEORGIA x Member of Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation WWW