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.JUNE 28, 1947
THE BULLETIN OF THE CATHOLIC LAYMEN’S ASSOCIATION OF GEORGIA
FIVE-A
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WE FURNISHED ALL
BUILDING MATERIALS TO BLESSED SACRAMENT CHURCH
CHARLESTON, S. C.
Olfite and Warehouse—Chapel and Washington Sts. FRANK C. FORD, President Phone 8336
Phone 2-0116
DR. M. A DeSOUZA
OPTOMETRIST-OPTICIAN
312 Kins: Street Charleston, S. C.
Asheville, N. C.
Greenville, S. C.
Raleigh, N. C.
McAlister, Smith & Pate, Inc.
Investment Securities
CHARLESTON, SOUTH CAROLINA
The Art Store j
LANNEAU’S ART STORE
238 KING STREET
Oldest Eastman Dealer in the South
Charleston, S. C.
SOUTHERN WELDING WORKS
784 MEETING ST.
CHARLESTON, S. C.
Wrecked Cars, Trucks, Trailer Frames and Axles Straightened
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Day Phone 62112
DOSCHER & KOESTER
WHOLESALE
Tobacco, Cigars and Candies
Distributors
231 Meeting Street
Charleston, S. C.
Best Wishes
CAROLINA PAINT COMPANY
Paints, Wallpaper, Window Glass
Picture Framing
57(1 KING STREET
CHARLESTON, S. C.
E. W. BAILEY SEED CO.
DEPENDABLE SEEDS FOR
Field - Farm - Garden
WHOLESALE - RETAIL
Store and Office — 221 East Bay
Warehouse — 238 East Bay
CHARLESTON, S. C.
CHARLESTON’S OLDEST PARISH CHURCH— Historic St. Mary's Church, in Charleston, S. C., is
one of the oldest Catholic churches in the South. It serves a parish established immediately after the
American colonies won their war for independence. 1 ts vestry has welcomed every Bishop of Charleston,
from Bishop John England, in 1820. to Bishop Emmet M. Walsh, in 1927. The present pastor is Father
J. W. Carmody, and the assistant pastor is Father Leon J. Hubacs.
Sacred Heart Alumnae
Gather in Belmont
BELMONT, N. C.—Celebrating
the 10th anniversary of the Sacred
Heart College, the Alumnae Asso
ciation held Its third annual Alum
nae Day on the school campus on
May 31, as a part of the commence
ment program.
The day’s program open with
Mass celebrated at St. Michael’s
Church, Gastonia, by Father Greg
ory Eichenlaub, O. S. B., and the
remainder of the morning was de
voted to class reunions and com
mittee meetings.
At the luncheon, in the college
dining hall, Miss Josephine Niggel,
prominent author, of Chapel Hill,
spoke on “Portraits of Mexico.”
Mrs. Julian Dye, of Winston-Salem,
president of the association, pre
sided, and the guest speaker was
presented by Mrs. Zoe Kincaid
Brockman, society editor of The
Gastonia Daily Gazette.
The report of Mrs. Thomas E.
Baugh, of Gastonia, chairman of
the development fund committee,
submitted at the afternoon busi
ness session, revealed that approxi
mately $30,000 had been raised to
ward, the construction of an acti
vities building on the campus, un
der the auspices of the associa
tion.
Officers elected to serve for a
two-year term were Mrs. J. P.
Smith, Mount Holly, president;
Mrs. George M. Howe, Belmont,
first vice-president; Mrs. Thomas
E. Baugh, Gastonia, second vice-
president, Miss Elizabeth McNeil,
Belmont, executive secretary; 'Miss
Margaret McKnight, Belmont, re
cording secretary, and Miss Monica
Brown, Mount Airy, treasurer.
Closing the program of the day’s
events was the alumnae dance at
the Gastonia Country Club, with
the Belmont Chapter of the Alum
nae Association, under the leader
ship of Miss Marjorie Roper, as
hostess.
Congressman McCormack
Speaks at.Abbey College
Commencement, Belmont
(Special to The Bulletin)
BELMONT, N. C„—At the 69th
annual graduation exercises of Bel
mont Abbey College, held in the
Haid Memorial gymnasium, June
5, one of the largest classes in the
school’s history received diplomas
from the Right Rev. Vincent G.
Taylor, O. S. B., D, D., Abbot-
Ordinary of Belmont, and heard an
address by the Hon. John W.
McCormack, member of Congress
form Massachusetts, and former
majority leader of the House of
Representatives.
SCHRODER PAINT AND SUPPLY CO., Inc.
Distributors for Duralite
177 Meeting Street
CHARLESTON, SOUTH CAROLINA
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With forceful, constructive, cou
rageous and affirmative leadership
in all walks of human activities,
particularly in the field of govern
ment, we can undertake the try
ing problems of today with confi
dence and not with fear,” declared
Congx-essman McCoi-maek, who
was introduced to his audience by
Father Cuthbert E. Allen, O. S. B.,
viee-pi-esident and rector of the
college.
Representative McCormack urg
ed the graduates to adhere to the
truth in which they believe. "Ap
ply these truths you have learned
in a Christian school to your daily
life as the safe road to your earth
ly and eternal ljappiness. Be lead-
ers in your future life, not mere
followers; wage an uncompi-omis-
ing battle against sin and hate;
work to preserve our institutions
and the democratic way of Life.”
The salutatory address was de
livered by Alfx'ed J. Bordallo, of
Guam, and J. Kirk Bain, of Crozet,
Va„ was tiie valedictorian.
Membex's of the 1946-47 gradu
ating class of the junior college
were: James Kirk Bain, Crozet,
Vp.; Dahal Eugene Bumgardner,
Belmoixt; Richard Hopkins Dris
coll, Charlotte; Francis Cameron
Dukes, Charlotte; Robert Richard
Ellington, Belmont; Robert James
English, Belmont; Frater Kevin
Fahey, Frater Kenneth Albert
Geyer, Belmont Abbey; Thomas
Francis Grosser, Jamaica, L. I.;
William Harris, Gastonia: Lind
bergh Hawley, Stanley; Carl L.
Hawn, Belmont; Quinn Ray Hen
dricks, Jr., Belmont; William Rich
ard Henkle, Belmont; James Foley
Hillegrass, Norfolk, Va.; Robert
Eugene Jenkins, Gastonia; William
Cosgrove Kennedy, Savannah, Ga.;
James Kelly Lewis, Mount Holly;
Ralph Pinkey Martin, Gastonia;
Fred Christopher Murphy
mont; John Henry Noell
Rev. John Gurley, S. J.
to Conduct Laymen's
Retreat in Georgia
(Special to The Bulletin)
AUGUSTA, Ga.—Monsignor Jos
eph E. Moylan, Vicar General of
the Diocese of Savannah-Atlanta,
has announced that Father John
E. Curley, S. J., a member of the
faculty of Lpyola University of the
South, in New Orleans, would con
duct the twenty-seventh annual
Retreat for men, held under the
auspices of the Catholic Laymen’s
Association of Georgia.
James B. Mulherin, of Augusta,
who is chairman of the Retreat
Section of the Laymen’s Associa
tion, repoi'ts that already sixty res
ervations have been made by pro
spective retreatants who expect to
attend the Retreat which will be
held at St. Joseph’s Home, Wash
ington, Ga., from the evening of
Friday, July 11, to the afternoon of
Sunday, July 13.
As not more than seventy re
treatants can be accommodated,
Mr. Mulherin states that only a
few more reservations can be ac
cepted.
Father Curley, who will conduct
the Retreat this year, has con
ducted a number of Retreats and
Missions as a member of the Jes
uit Missionary Band, and the news
that he is to be assigned for the
Retreat in Washington this year is
welcomed by the Georgia laymen
who know his reputation as a re-
trealmaster.
VATICAN Circles have hail
ed as of “great importance” a
newly-published book by Professor
Michele Mace a rone on relations
between the Church and the Nazi
regime in Germany. This publi
cation, it is reported, aims to
throw light on the struggle which
Catholicism had to sustain against
Nazism, and to show the incon
sistency of the attacks against the
Church today by those whb accuse
it of having favored Hitlerism.
Roderick William O’Donoghue,
Charlotte; John Gardner O’Toole,
Fredericksburg, Va.; Arthur Bed
ford Pursley, Gastonia; Charles R.
Scales, Hickory; John Albert Snell-
ing, Spartanburg, S. C.; Franklin
Albert Steele, Bellevue, Pa.;Wil
liam Whiten Stowe, Mount Holly;
Jasper Carl Stowe, Jr., Gastonia;
Candido Urtiaga Martcll, Havana,
Bel- Cuba: James Anthony Wilson,
Slielby; Berwyn. Pa.