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MARCH 27, 1948,
THE BULLETIN OF THE CATHOLIC LAYMEN’S ASSOCIATION OF GEORGIA
FIFTEEN
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nqm NIATi.NG SERVjCg
Paintings Exhibited by
Art School Students at
Sacred Heart, Belmont
PROTESTANT EDUCATOR
FAVORS FEDERAL AID
TO PAROCHIAL SCHOOLS
Greenville K. of C.
Organize Fourth .
Degree Assembly
Prior of
Abbey
MARRIAGES
(Special to The Bulletin)
BELMONT, N. C.—The students
of the Art department of Sacred
Heart Junior College and Academy
held an exhibit of their work on
March 5, under the sponsorship of
the Art division of the Gastonia
Woman’s Club.
Paintings in water colors and
oils were entered by the students,
and Sister M. Theophane, head of
the Art department, who studied
at Peabody, Notre Dame, and at
art centers in Rochester and Pitts
burgh, also exhibited several of
her water colors.
Among the exhibitors were Mrs.
Carl King and Miss Bobby Mann,
of Gastonia; Miss Mary Ellen Don-
worth, of New York; Miss Toni
Kyrus, Norfolk; Miss Elizabeth
O’Connor, Greensboro; Miss Helen
Chrystalis and Miss Patsy Sipe,
Charlotte; Miss Mary Ann Clegg,
Mount Holly; Miss Ann Stewart,
Miss Peggy Featherstone and Miss
Dolores Couch. Belmont.
Easter Greetings
EDDIE RICH
Hairdresser to Woman’s
Individual Needs
1031 Feachtree Street
Atlanta. Ga.
GRAND RAPIDS, Mich.— Fed
eral and state financial aid for
private or parochial schools, “to
give equal opportunity to all and
special privileges to none,” was
recommended here by Dr. Henry
VanZyl, profesmr of education at
Calvin College, in an address be
fore members of the Michigan
Christian School Alliance.
“If we want to have a healthy
social structure and preserve our
democracy, and if private schools
are among the best guarantees of
liberty and freedom, then we ought
to give private schools and private
initiative more support,” Dr. Van
Zyl asserted.
Parochial schools of all faiths
are as entitled to governmental
assistance as are public schools,
under the American theory of jus
tice for all and prejudice toward
none, in Dr. VanZyl’s opinion-
He sees no threat in private
school aid to the American princi
ple of separation oi Church and
State. “Governmental financial
support to all schools, public and
private, would be more in keeping
with the spirit of democracy upon
which this country was founded,”
he said.
Dr. VanZyl contended thfet the
“founding fathers” never intended
to separate Church and State to
the extent that a large segment of i
Americans would be penalized fi-1
nancially because they want to ed
ucate their children in schools of
their own choosing. i
The Michigan Alliance is part
of the National Union of Christian j
Schools, which are indirectly sup-1
ported by the Christian Reformed\
Church and the Reformed Church
in America.
(Special to The Bulletin)
GREENVILLE, S. C.—A Fourth
Degree Assembly of Greenville
Council, Knights of Columbus,
was organized at a Communion
breakfast held on Palm Sunday
at the Hotel Greenville. The
breakfast followed a Mass at St.
Mary’-s Church at which members
of the K. of C. had heceived
Holy Communion in a body.
John B. Garrison has been ap
pointed temporary chairman of the
assembly by Thomas J. Canty, of
Savannah, Ga., Master of the Dc
Soto Province of Fourth Degree
Knights fo Columbus, which in
eludes Georgia and South Ca:
lina.
The Greenville Assembly v.
include as members: Jamile J.
Francis, T. Riley Burriss, II. B.
Wells, J. A. Putnam, Francis T.!
Dowling, A. W. Fairano, Ted
Obermeyer, Clyde Swcdenberg;
and J. B. Garrison, of Greenville; '
E. P. Joyce and J. P. Sioner, of
Spartanburg.
Members of Greenville Council
who are already fourth degree
members who will be affiliated j
with the new assembly are Mon- j
signor Andrew Keene Gwynn, P.'
A., Father James Sharpies, C. O.,!
J. II. P. Rascob and John L. Bow
ers.
The Greenville Assembly will
be the third Fourth Degree As-'
sembly in South Carolina, others j
already being established in Char
leston and Columbia.
FATHER JOSEPH
The Very Rev. Joseph Tobin,
O. S. B., Vicar General of the
Abbatia Nullius of Belmont, is
Prior of Belmont Abbey. Father
Joseph is a native of Pottslown,
Pennsylvania. He entered the Or
der of St. Benedict in 1919, and
was ordained to the priesthood in
1924. After his ordination, he did
post-graduate study in science at
the University of Notre Dame and
the University of Pennsylvania,
and holds a degree of Master of
Science. He has also done consid
erable work in the field of aero
nautics and is rated as an instruc
tor by the Civil Aeronautical Ad
ministration.
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"| WAITS-McCONNEGHEY |
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ATLANTA, Ga. — Mr. and Mrs.
John Joseph McConneghey an
nounce the marriage of theib
daughter. Miss Mary Elizabeth
McConneghey, to Mr. Charles Ed
ward Waits, on March 13, at the
Sacred Heart Church, Father Har
ry T. Hayes, S. M., officiating.
The bride’s mother is the for
mer Miss Edna Loretta Cottrell,
daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs.
George Henry Cottrell, of New Or
leans. On her paternal side, she »s
the granddaughter of the late Mr.
and Mrs. Wililam Kidd McConne
ghey, also of New Orleans.
Mr. Waits is the son of the late
Dr. Charles Edward Waits, promi
nent Atlanta surgeon, and Mrs.
Denzil Warren Waits, of Chicago.
His mother is the former Miss Se
lene Carlson, daughter of the laie
Wililam Carlson and Mrs. Bertha
Kloddahl Carlson, of - Dulutn,
Minn.
DODDS-GUNNELLS
Easter Greetings
DIAMOND JEWELRY COMPANY
7 Edge wood Avenue
In the Heart of Five Points
Atlanta, Georgia
JUVENILE INSURANCE
PROGRAM OFFERED BY
KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUS
Sub-Prior of
Belmont Abbey
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CHARLESTON, S. C. — Miss
Mattie Fiorina Gunnells, daughter
of Mr. Charles S. Gunnells and the
lqte Mrs. Gunnells, of Bamberg,
and Mr. John Joseph Dodds, Jr.,
son of Mr. and Mrs. John J. Dodds,
of Charleston, were married March
20 at the Sacred Heart Church,
Father Henry F. Wolfe officiat
ing.
(Special to The Bulletin) '
NEW HAVEN, Conn.—The In
surance Department of the Su
preme Council of the Knights of
Columbus has announced that ap
plications for Juvenile insurance
may now be secured from repre
sentatives of the Order who are
authorized to issue them. This
program became effective on Jan
uary 1, and the details were re
leased after several years of con
sideration.
In general, the provisions of j
the Juvenile certificates are simi
lar to those in adult certificates,
as regards beneficiary, dividends 1
and incontestability, and the pro
visions regarding loan equity and
automotive contribution loans are
much the same. One exception, !
relative to the applicant, is the
legal requirements that the appli-'
IIERMANN-FOSKEY
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SAVANNAH, Ga.—Miss Katie
Mae Foskey, daughter of the late
Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Foskey, of
Adrian, and Mr. Richard Bernard
Hermann, of Chicago, were mar
ried on February 25 at the Cathe
dral of St. John the Baptist, Fath
er Edgar Bissonette officiating.
RENNER-GUY
O O
ATLANTA, Ga.—Miss Cleo Pat
sy Guy, of Seneca, S. C„ and At
lanta, and Mr. Henry Clement
Renner of St. Petersburg and At
lanta, were married March 2, at
the Sacred Heart Church, Father
Lawrence R. Schmuhl, S. M„ of
ficiating.
UFFELMANN-BENDER
cation is not made by the Child ■
(even though he is old enough to
read and write), but is made by
another person. As a general rule,
the applicant must be an insur
ance member or an associate mem- j
ber of the^ Knights of Columbus,
in good standing, who is responsi
ble for the support of the child,
preferably the child’s father. |
Juvenile insurance is to be writ
ten only on boys who have been
baptized and who will be ac
ceptable as insurance members
when they feach the age of eigh
teen. When the juvenile reaches
his eighteenth birthday he is ex
pected to join the Order as an
insurance member of he is eli- 1
gible. |
Complete information on the,
juvenile insurance program, as
well as adult insurance plans can
be secured from the grand knight
or financial secretary of any coun
cil of the Knights of Columbus.
The Very Rev. Sebastian Doris,
O. S. B., Sub-Prior of Belmont
Abbey, Belmont, North Carolina,
is a native of Augusta, Georgia,
and a graduate of Belmont Ab-
by College. He was ordained to
the priesthood in 1931, and served
for some years as pastor of St.
Aloysius Church, in Hickory,
North Carolina. In addition to
his duties as Sub-Prior of the Ab-
by and as a member of the college
faculty. Father Sebastian is chap
lain of the Sacred Heart Junior
College and Academy in Belmont.
ORATORIAN FATHER
CONDUCTS RETREAT AT
BELMONT ABBEY COLLEGE
BELMONT, N. C.—Father Mau
rice Shean, C. O., of the Oratory
of St. Philip Neri, Rock Hill, S. C„
conducted a Retreat for the stu
dent at Belmont Abbey College
during the first week of March.
SAVANNAH, Ga. — Miss Jean
Bender, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Lloyd A. Bender, of New Kings
town, Pa., and Captain John Uffel-
man, son of Captain and Mrs. Hen
ry Uffclmann, of Savannah, were
married on February 28 at the Sa
cred Heart Church, Father Timo
thy Flaherty, O. S. B., officiating.
MILLARD-KESSINGER
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ATLANTA, Ga.—Mr. and Mrs.
Carl D. Kessinger, of Tulsa, Okla.,
have announced the marriage of
their daughter, Miss Doris Jean
Kessinger, to Mr. Maydwell Ilen-
erson Millard, Jr., son of Mrs.
M. H. Millard, Sr., of Atlanta, at
St. Francis de Sales Church, Salis
bury, Md., Father Charles J. Mc-
Ginley officiating.
G
| GENONE-ETHERTDGE
O —
GYMNASIUM AT BELMONT ABBEY COLLEGE—Pictured above is
the gymnasium at Belmont Abbey College, a structure which was add
ed several years ago to the group of buildings at Belmont Abbey. Mod
ern and well equipped, the new building offers the students many
facilities for physical development and athletic diversion.
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MACON, Ga.—Miss Catherine
Etheridge and Mr. J. Ernest Oe-
none, Jr., were married on March
14 at the rectory of St. Joseph's
Church, Father Robert Bryant, S.
J., officiating.
MEARS-HOOVER
HAMPTON, S. C.—Miss Jeanne
Patricia Hoover, of Washington,
D. C., daughter of Vice Admiral
and Mrs. John Howard Hoover,
and Lieutenant Colonel James
Franklin Mears, son of Mr. and
Mrs. W. H. Harrison, of Varnville,
were married in the Naval Chapel
in Washington, Father Henry D.
Collins, pastor of St. Ann’s Church,
officiating.
MONSIGNOR CASSIDY
SPEAKS AT MEETING OF
LIONS CLUB AT SAVANNAH
SAVANNAH, Ga. — Monsignor
Joseph G. Cassidy. V. P., rector of
the Cathedral of Christ the King,
in Atlanta, spoke at the luncheon
meeting of the Lions Club of Sa
vannah, held on March 11, at the
Hotel Savannah. Monsignor Cas
sidy was presented to his audi
ence by James F. Glass. John B.
Rourke, president of 'the local
Lions Club, presided.