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JULY 25, 1942
THE BULLETIN OF THE CATHOLIC LAYMEN’S ASSOCIATION OF GEORGIA
FIVE
Paul Malholchic
Resigns as NCCS
Area Supervisor
ATLANTA, Ga., — Paul J. Mal-
halchic, who has served with dis
tinction as Southeastern Area Di
rector of the National Catholic
Community Service, a member
agency of the United Service Or
ganizations for the past year, ter
minated his connection with the
N. C. C. S. on July 1 to accept a
position with the Federal Security
Administration, for which govern
mental agency he will work out of
New York and Washington.
Edmund Kadzuk, who has been
Mr. Malholehic’s assistant, will
succeed him as area director for
the N. C. C. S.
Best Wishes
Palmer-Llpe
Paint Co.
82 Patton Avenue
Asheville, N. C.
FATHER GOLDSMITH NOW
AUXILIARY CHAPLAIN
AT FORT JACKSON, S. C.
COLUMBIA, S. C.—The Rev. J.
William Goldsmith, who has been
engaged in post graduate study at
the Catholic University of Amer
ica in Washington, will serve as an
auxiliary chaplain at Fort Jackson
during the summer months.
Father Goldsmith, a native of
Atlanta, was # ordained for the
Diocese of Charleston in the
Cathedral of Christ the King in
Atlanta last June.
CAMP ST. LEO OPENS
WITH RECORD ENROLLMENT
ST. LEO, Fla.—Camp St. Leo,
the Florida boys’ summer camp,
has begun what promises to be a
highly successful season with a
record enrollment of nearly ninety
boys. The Rev. Raphael Schoof,
O. S. B„ who has recently return
ed to St. Leo from the Catholic
University- of America, is again
the Camp Director, assisted by a
staff of fathers and clerics from
St. Leo Abbey. Intense interest
has been shown in the varied ac
tivities by all the boys attending,
including registrants from Cali
fornia, Puerto Rico, Virginia and
all parts of Florida. First aid train
ing and a health development pro
gram are being stressed this year.
Added to the athletic and recrea
tional activities, instruction is im
parted in handicraft and nature
study, which together with the
moral and religious training is do
ing a lot to build up the stamina
and morale of the boys attending.
THE FLOWER SHOP
of
Middlemounf Gardens,
Incorporated
64 Patton Avenue Phones 815—816
Asheville, North Carolina
Best Wishes
Biltmore Hardware Co.
Paints, Farm Toots and Garden Seeds
PHONE 94 BILTMORE, N. C.
M. B. Haynes Electric Co.
Telephone 2772
76 WOODFIN STREET ASHEVILLE, N. C.
Best Wishes
REUSING’S
FRIGIDAIRE — ELECTRIC REFRIGERATION
Arcade Building Asheville, N. C.
Best Wishes
YOUNG PRODUCE CO.
WHOLESALE
Fruits, Vegetables, Poultry and Eggs
Phone 4488 90 North Lexington Avenue
ASHEVILLE, N. C.
COCA-COLA BOTTLING COMPANY
ASHEVILLE, N. C.
St. Joan of Arc Church,
Asheville, North Carolina
St. Joan of Arc parish, in West Asheville, North Carolina, was
formed from St. Lawrence parish in 1928. The Rev. John P. Manley
is the present pastor, and the Rev. Frank O’Brien is assistant pastor.
New Members Added to Roll of
League of Mary Immaculate
Additions to Staff of
Spartanburg USO Club
(Special to The Bulletin)
SPARTANBURG, S. C.—Sam J.
Francis, director of the USO Club
operated by the National Catholic
Comunity Service, has announced
the appointment of two new per
sonnel members to the staff of
the local unit.
Miss Louise Collins, of Colum
bia, and alumnus of the University
of South Carolina, was named
woman’s assistant. Miss Collins
is succeeding Mrs. Robert M.
Young, the former Miss Kathryn
McNamara.
For several years Miss Collins
has been teaching in the public
schools of Greenville, and has been
prominently identified with social
and civic activity in that city. She
was president of St. Mary’s Guild
of St. Mary’s Church in Greenville,
and for some time was accompanist
for the Rotary Boy Choristers and
for the Junior High School glee
club.
Edward Cummins, a native of
Brooklyn, has ben named associate
director of the local USO-NCCS
Club. He is a graduate of Colum
bia University and also attended
the Savage School of Physical Edu
cation and City College in New
York City. He had charge of
organization, administration, su
pervision of physical social, educa
tional activities for about 70,000
persons and was in complete charge
of a large school building and staff
of twenty teachers. From 1926
to 1941 he was director of Com
munity Center, and physical direc
tor for the Division of Recreation,
in charge of assignments for play
grounds, activity program, coordi
nating other pupil service agencies
dissemination of recreational in
formation to the general public.
HOBBY DEN ESTABLISHED
Activities at the USO-NCCS
Club here are expected to reach a
new high with the establishment
of a new Hobby Den. A complete
“Do it yourself” studio has been
annexted to the club. Already it
is growing in popularity and many
service men from Camp Croft arc
spending their leisure time in do
ing craft work, sketching, printing,
and radio work. Mrs. Myrtle An
derson has been placed in charge
and announces that within the
next few weeks an exhibit of the
material will be on display in one
of the downtown department
stores.
A recent and worthwhile service
being rendered by the local unit
through the N. C. C. W. is the
“Sew Corner.” Each week a group
of women, under the leadership of
Mrs. Stella Becker, president of
the Council, come to the club and
mend, alter and tailor the uni
forms of the soldiers.
The NCCS is making every
effort to register rooms that are
available in the community. Dur
ing the month of June about 100
persons were placed in private
homes. Staff members of the club
will list rooms or apartments that
are neat and clean, and for which
the rental asked is not exorbitant.
Popular activities at the club
recently included outdoor motion
picture, barbecues, ping pong,
horse-shoe pitching, archery, cro
quet, badmington, spaghetti sup
pers, smokers, bridge parties, and
dances. In cooperation with the
Red Cross, motion pictures are
being shown once each week at the
Station Hospital, and each week
a member of the staff arranged
to give patients in the hospital an
opportunity to “talk a letter
home.”
SOLDIERS CONFIRMED
AT WRIGHTSVILLE
WRIGHTSVILLE, N. C.—The
Most Rev. Stephen J. Donahue,
Auxiliary Bishop of New York, ad
ministered Confirmation to a class
of 25 soldiers at the Church of the
Little Flower here. The soldiers
confirmed were from the United
States Army Air Base, Wilming
ton, N. C., and Fort Fisher, N. C.
The Most Rev. Eugene J. McGuin-
ness, D. D., Bishop of Raleigh,
was present in the sanctuary dur
ing the ceremony, and the sermon
was delivered by the Reu. Corne
lius Drew, pastor of St. Paul’s
Church, New York City.
AUGUSTA, Ga.—-James B. Mul-
herin, chairman of the Retreat
Section of the Catholic Layman’s
Association of Georgia, has an
nounced the enrollment of addi
tional members in the League of
Mary Immaculate, whose mem
bers are uniting in prayers for vic
tory and a just peace.
The League has three degrees
of membership, those who prom
ise to recite five decades of the
Rosary each day, those who prom
ise to recite the Way of the Cross
once a week, and those who prom
ise a no vena of Masses and Com
munions for the duration of the
war. Compliance with any of
these conditions is all that is re
quired for full membership, which
is open to men and women.
Recent additions to the roil of
members are:
Augusta: T. J. Mulligan, Mrs.
C. C. Stulb, Mrs. E. K. Lynch,
Mrs. D. J. O’Connor, Mrs. K. T.
Gilbert, Mrs. Harry Cosgrove,
Kfrs. W. J. Heffernan, Mrs. A. J.
Maguire, Mrs. J. L. Herman. Mrs.
W. J. Mulherin, Mrs. J. S.
Schweers, Mrs. Marion Stulb, Mrs.
Andrew Sheahan, Mrs. Margie
Bedingfield, Mrs. Annie Wallace,
Mrs. P. H. Thompson, Mrs. P. J.
Park, Mrs. M. C. Roberts, Mrs.
Ben Boeckman, Mrs. John Burk,
Mrs. C. C. Kemp, Mrs. A. F. Otis,
Mrs. Mary S. Toomey, Miss Eliza
beth Donnelly.
Atlanta: Mrs. L. K. Dicks, Mrs.
Mary Dicks White, Miss Bess Raf
ferty, Miss Daisy Blackwell, Miss
Laura Loring, Mrs. Jack Leamy,
Mrs. Fred Fister, Mrs. E. F. Edge,
Miss Sarah Fahy, Miss Henel Au-
clair, Mrs. Helen F. Zink, Mrs.
Leo Sullivan, Mrs. Frank White,
Miss Mary Tierman, Mrs. W. J.
McAlpin.
Macon: Mrs. Clark Davis, Mrs.
W. F. Murphy, Mrs. Floyd Harris,
Miss Mabel McNeil, Miss Mary
Long, Miss Nina Benedetto, Mrs.
W. D. Jarrett, Sr., Mrs. R. F.
Wynne.
Columbus: Mrs. Van Marcus,
Miss Marie Heffernan, Mrs. Henry
J. Murphy.
Brunswick: Mrs. John Farrell,
Mrs. A. P. Leotis.
Valdosta: Mrs. H. C. Van Horn.
Savannah: Mrs. W. D. Prescott,
Mrs. D. J. Sheehan, Mrs. John Z.
Ryan, Mrs. James Nueslein, Mrs.
D. J. Colvin, Mrs. Harold Mul
herin, Mrs. John Lyons, Jr., Miss
Kate Latham, Miss Marg. Mc
Nally, Mrs. Loretto Flanagan, Mrs.
Victor Meyer, Mrs. J. A. O'Leary,
Mrs. Joseph D. Sheehan, Mrs.
M. T. East. Mrs. E. Cageiro, Miss
Kate Walsh. Mrs. Peter Roe Nu
gent, Miss Helen Roe Nugent, Mrs.
John F. Curren, Mrs. Chas. F..
Huggins, Mrs. W. E. Hines, Mrs.
Jos. E. Kelly, Mrs. Chas. F. Pow
ers, Mrs. Claudia Gannon, Mrs.
Margaret Croke, Mrs. John Buck-
ley, Mrs. Julius Gazas, Mrs. Mary
Callahan. Mrs. R. J. Walsh, Mrs.
James E. Henderson, Mrs. J. C.
Hartfelder, Mrs. L. H. Cooper,
Mrs. Fred G. Doyle, Mrs. Norton
Frierson. Mrs. M. Overstreet, Mrs.
C. C. Blankenship, Mrs. Thomas
F. Walsh. Mrs. H. T. Wilson, Miss
Mary E. Reilly, Mrs. J. Reid Brod
erick, Mrs. John Paul Jones, Mrs.
J. P. Doyle, Mrs. Wm. C. Brod
erick. Mrs. F. X. Beytagh, Mrs.
T. K. Joyce, MiSs Leslie McDon
ough, Mrs. Margeret Murphy,
Mrs. H. L. Helmly, Sr., Mrs. R. T.
Semmes. Mrs. Mary E. O’Connor,
Mrs. Cornelius McCarthy, Miss
Regina O'Driscoll, Miss Veronica
Elliott, Mrs. Arthur Pierce, Miss
Persis Jones, Miss Meta L. Eber-
wein, Mrs. Hannah, McDonough,
Mrs. Joe Folliard, Mrs. D. W. Du
pont, Mrs. J. P. Stephens, Mrs.
Ted Elliott, Mrs. J. J. Butimer,.
Miss Mary Buckley, Miss Bertha
Buckley, Mrs. Wm. Harris, Miss
Frances Cusack, Mrs. P. R.
Schreck, Mrs. T. P. Wright, Miss
Mary McNally, Mrs. Zoller, Mrs.
Alice Cooper, Mrs. Jos. E. Kelly,
Jr., Mrs. John TJ. Butler, Mrs. Har
ry G. Butler, Miss Margaret But
ler, Mrs. Andrew Doyle, Miss
Catherine Cullum, Miss Kate Fo
garty. Miss Bridget Fogarty, Mrs.
H. W. Reinhart, Mrs. E. J. Whelan,
Miss Viva Harty, Miss Johanna
Daly.
St. Anthony's Church
Asheville, North Carolina
Franciscan Fathers are in charge of St. Anthony's Church, which
serves the colored Catholics of Asheville, North Carolina. The Rev.
Edmund J. Murphy, O. F. M., is the pastor, and the Rev. Gordon
Krahe, O. F. M., is assistant pastor. Sisters of the Third Order Reg
ular of St. Francis, of Allegany, N. Y., conduct the parochial school.