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TWELVE
THE BULLETIN OF THE CATHOLIC LAYMEN’S ASSOCIATION OF GEORGIA
MARCH 27, 1937
CHARLESTON LOSES
DETECTIVE CHIEF
Auto Injuries Fatal to John
J. Healy in Columbia
(Special lo The Bulletin)
CHARLESTON.. S. C.—John Joseph
Healy, chief of Charleston detectives,
died in Columbih March 15 from in
juries received when the automobile
in which he was riding collided with
a heavy fertilizer truck. He was go
ing to Columbia to testify in a Fed
eral court case. Chief Healy died
fortified by the Last Sacraments.
Mr. Healy's ' closest relatives, Miss
Marguerite Boyler, a sister-in-law,
and Miss Elizabeth..Steeger, a .niece,
were at his bedside when, death came.
Mr. Healy’s wife died some years ago.
Chief W. H. Rawlinson, of the Co
lumbia police department, long a per
sonal friend of Chief Healy. was no
tified of the accident shortly after it
happened and he passed several hours
carrying out the dying detective’s last
requests.
Monsignor Joseph L. O'Brien offici
ated at the Requiem Mass at the fu
neral at St. Patrick’s Church. Inter
ment was in St. Lawrence Ceme
tery. The honorary pallbearers were
headed by Mayor Burnet R. May-
bank, former Mayor Thomas P. Sto-
ney, Chief of Police Chris H. Ort-
mann and Columbia Chief of Police
W. H. Rawlinson.
MISS EVA KANAPAUX. a mem
ber of a widely known family, died
here in February. Funeral services
were held at the Sacred Heart Church
with the Rev. Henry Wolfe, officiat
ing. Interment was in St. Lawrence
Cemetery.. Miss Kanapaux was edu
cated in the schools' of Charleston,
and was a daughter of John T. and
Mary White Kanapaux. both of this
city. She conducted a business school
here for 20 years, and retired five
years ago..
MISS THERESA JANCOVICH, of
this city, died at-her home here in
February. Funeral services were at
St. Mary’s Church, with a Requiem
Mass,, the Rev. J. W. Carmody. pastor,
officiating. Interment was at St. Law-,
rence Cemetery. . Miss JanEovich was
a native of this city, and was the
daughter of Christiana KosmannJan-
covich, of Germany, and Sylvesta Jan-
covich, of Austria.' She received her
education in this city. Surviving Miss
Jancovich are a niece, Mrs. Mazie
Mattson; three nephews. Samuel S.,
Walter I., and Harry J. Chapman.
MRS. MARY .LOUISE. O'BRIEN,
widow of John C. O'Brien, died here
early in March. Mrs. O'Brien, a na
tive of Charleston, was a daughter of
Patrick Sheridan and Mrs. Maria Da
vis Sheridan. She attended the Char
leston schools and was a member of
St. Patrick's Church.
THOMAS A. LYNCH, accountant at
the Fort Moultrie post exchange, died
at the post hospital here early in
March. He was a native of Glenn
Falls. N. Y., and a member of St.
Joseph's Church here, from which the
funeral was held, with interment in
St. Lawrence Cemetery.
REV. LEONARD TWINE M, for
twenty-three years an Episcopalian
minister, and formerly rector of St.
John's Protestant Episcopal Church,
Flushing, Long Island, N. Y., has be-
vome a Catholic, and attributes his en
trance into the Church mainly to the
radio sermons of Father James M. Gil-
lis, C. 9. P., editor of the Catholic
World. Dr. Twinem, who has contribu
ted to leading secular and religious
magazines, is a native of West Vir
ginia, son of a Presbyterain minister,
was education chairman at Wooster.
O.. College and Union Theological
Seminary.
SPARTANBURG, S. G,
Frs. Clancy, Burke
at Saint Patrick’s
Monsignor O’Brien’s assistants at
St. Patrick’s, without whose invalu
able assistance, he says, in his cen
tennial book, that work and many
of the other details of the centenary
program would have been impossible,
are Father John P. Clancy and Father
J. Edmund Burke.
FATHER CLANCY was born in
New York September 8, 1900, edu
cated at St-. Francis Xavier College,
New York, Belmont Abbey College
and St. Mary’s Seminary, Baltimore,
and ordained June 10, 1933. Father
Clancy has been a member of the
faculty of Bishop England High
School since his ordination, and has
been at St. Patrick’s since October
5, 1935.
FATHER BURKE was born Sep
tember 8, 1899, in New York, where
his father was a widely known phy
sician. He was educated at St. Law
rence Academy, Mt. Vernon High
School, St. Benedict’s College, Atchi
son, Kansas, and St. Mary's Seminary,
Baltimore, Md. He served in the
Navy during the World War, in the
convoy service. Father Burke was
ordained in Baltimore May 26, 1934,
and has been attached ot St. Patrick’s
Church since that time.
COLUMBIA DEANERY
N. C. C. W. HAS MEETING
Mrs. R. W. Gerald of Sumter
Again Elected President
PRICE’S
123 N. Church St.
at Kennedy Place
Men’s Furnishings
For Better
Printing for
Every Purpose
Engraved Stationery, In
vitations, c ards, etc.
Go to
Williams Printing
Company
Hotel Franklin Building
Spartanburg, S. C.
(Special to The Bulletin)
COLUMBIA, S. C. - The Columbia
deanery of the Charleston Diocesan
Council of Catholic Women had its
quarterly meeting Tuesday, March 9,
at St. Francis Hall in Shandon. The
meeting was opened with prayer by
the Rev. Thomas J. Mackin. Mrs. R.
W. Gerald of Sumter, president, pre
sided.
The address of welcome was given
by Miss Marie Cormack of Columbia,
and the response by Mrs. E. F. Moses,
Sr., of Sumter. Many interesting re
ports were read by chairmen of or-
Children in the Home”.
the convention to be held in Charles
ton April 3, 4 and 5. Another guest
at the meeting was Mrs. Ida Hirst-
Many members from Orangeburg.
Sumter and Blackville attended.
JAMES F. REDDING IS
DEAD IN CHARLESTON
Police Official Member of
Widely Known Family
CHARLESTON, S. C.—James F.
Redding, fingerprint bureau expert of
the Charleston police department died
here in March of pneumonia. Mr.
Redding was a brother of Mrs. J. Al
bert Von Dohlen, and was promi
nent in the Knights of Columbus and
the Elks.
A native- of Charleston, he was edu
cated at Mount St. Mary’s College at
Emmittsburg, Md., Clemson College
and the Medical College of the State
of South Carolina. He left the medi
cal College to enter real estate busi
ness in his father’s office on Broad
Street.
In 1932 he took over the fingerprint
work of the Charleston police depart
ment, a psition he held at the time
of his death.
Mr. Redding was fifty years old, a
son of Captain James F. Redding and
Mrs. Honora Redding. Besides Mrs.
Von Dohlen, three sisters survive,
Mrs. N- P. Anderson, and the Misses
Lila and Margaret Redding of Atlanta.
The Rev. John J. McCarthy offi
ciated at the Requiem Mass for Mr.
Redding, at the Cathedral of St. John
the Baptist. Interment was at St.
Lawrence Cemetery.
FATHER RAPHAEL McCarthy, S.
J., for the past nine years head of the
Department of Psychology, at 9t. Louis
University, has been installed as pres
ident of Marquette University, Mil
waukee, succeeding Father William M.
Magee, S. J., president since 1928.
The Spartanburg Herald
and
The Spartanburg Journal
SPARTANBURG, S. C.
BECKER’S
Quality Products
50 Years the Standard
Rev. Martin Murphy.
FATHER JAMES McMANUS,.
tired mathematics professor and
mer rector of Walsh and Corby 1
at the University of Notre D
died at the University recently,
was ordained in 1906.
The J 1
F Flovd
m 11w l
\
Mori
235 N. Church Street
tuary
Spartanburg, S. C.