Newspaper Page Text
MAY 17, 1952 THE BULLETIN OF THE CATHOLIC L AYMEN’S ASSOCIATION OF GEORGIA
SEVEN
MARRIAGES
o-
I
o-
FOGARTY-TUTEN
SAVANNAH, Ga. — Miss Eliza
beth Ann Tuten and Mr. Thomas
Joseph Fogarty, Jr., were married
on April 26 at the Sacred Heart
Church, Father Aloysius Wachter,
O. S. B., officiating.
Mrs, Fogarty is the daughter of
Mrs. Henry Wilson Tuten and the
late Mr. Tuten. Mr. Fogarty is the
son of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Joseph
Fogarty.
O-
O-
KINGER Y -BAILEY
—O
I
—6
ATLANTA, Ga.—Miss Christine
Jolaine Bailey, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. John Samuel Bailey, and Mr.
John William Kingery, son of Mrs.
Robert Owens, of Augusta, were
married on April 26 at the Sacred
Heart Church, Father Harry T.
Hayes, S. M., officiating and offer
ing the Nuptial Mass.
O-
I
o-
JIOGA N- WOLCOTT
-O
o
AUGUSTA, Ga. — Miss Martyl
Frances Wolcott, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Oliver Cromwell Walcott,
and Mr. William Joseph Hogan, Jr.,
son of Mrs. William J. Hogan'and
the late Mr. Hogan, were married
on May 10 at the Sacred Heart
Church, with Monsignor James J.
Grady, of Atlanta, officiating and
offering the Nuptial Mass.
o-
O-
myler-thomas
-o
14
-o
ALBANY, Ga. —. Miss Dorothy
Jean Thomas, daughter of the Rev.
and Mrs. L. R. Thomas, of Pelham,
and Mr. James F. Myler, Jr., son of
Mr. and Mrs. James F. Myler, were
married on April 29 at St. Theresa's
Church. Father Daniel J. Bourke
V. F. officiating. ~
o-
I
O-
ROACH-BAGWELL
ATLANTA, Ga.—Miss Patricia
Bagwell, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
R. W. Bagwell, a nd Mr. James
Roach. Jr., were married at the
Co-Cathedral of Christ the King,
with Father Michael Mulvoy, C.S!
Sp.. chaplain of the Newman club
at the University of Alabama, of
ficiating.
O-
I
o-
ELMORE-McMILLAN
-O
o
SAVANNAH, Ga—Miss Jane
Inman McMillan, daughter of Mrs.
William Davis McMillan and the
late Mr. McMillan, and Mr. Fran
cis Tanner Elmore were married
on May 3 at the Sacred Heart
Church, Father Robert Brennan.
O.S.B . officiating.
O-
O’BRIEN-PHARR
O-
-O
-o'
LAWRENCEVILLE, Ga. — Miss
Mildred Pharr, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Cecil S. Pharr, of Law-
renceville, and Gerald J. O’Brien,
Jr., son of Mr; and Mrs. Gerald J.
O’Brien, of Washington, D. C., and
San Diego, were married on May
10 at the Shrine of the Most
Blessed Sacrament in Washington,
Father Charles D. Gorman officiat
ing.
The bride has for the past three
years been a member of the staff
of Senaotr Richard B. Russell in
Washington. 'Mr. O’Brien, a gradu
ate of the University of Notre
Dame Law School, is now on the
staff of the Solicitor’s Office of
the Department of Agriculture.
o-
O-
FEUGER-BLAKE
-o
I
-o
SAVANNAH, Ga.—Miss Eleanor
Anne Blake and Mr. Charles Ed
win Feuger, Jr., were married on
May 3 at the Cathedral of St. John
the Baptist, Monsignor T. James
McNamara officiating and offering
the Nuptial Mass.
MOROY-LUNDY
ATLANTA. Ga,—-Miss Christine
Lundy, daughter of Mrs. L. G.
Daley, and Mr. Robert L. Moroy.
son of Mr. and Mrs. Francis C. Mo
roy, were married on May 3 at St.
Anthony’s Church, Father John
Emmerth, S.M., officiating.
Benedictine School
Anniversary From to
Be Held-in Savannah
SAVANNAH, Ga.—One of the
annual events which is outstanding
in the high school set is the Junior-
Senior Prom given by the Bene
dictine Military School. This year
the occasion will be especially sig
nificant as this is the year in
which the Benedictine School
celebrates its fiftieth anniversary.
The dance will be held on the
evening of May 21 in the grand
ballroom of the Hotel De Soto.
Sponsors for the dance, and their
escorts will be Miss Mae Lou Daye,
with Cadet Lieutenant Colonel
Joseph Hobbs; Miss Marjorie Mor
rissey. with Cadet Major Glenn
Gibson; Miss Patricia Weigle, with
Cadet Major David Whelan; Miss
Mary Jane Furlong, with Cadet
Captain William Cunningham, and
Miss Joan Morel, with Cadet Cap
tain Anthony Mathews.
A NEW MONASTERY of the
American-founded community of
Dominican Nuns of the Perpetual
Rosary, has recently been opened
at Fatima, Portugal. •
FOR THE JUNE BRIDE
Prayer Books—White Leatherette Cover, from $2.95—Mother of
Pearl Cover from $4.00. Deluxe Bride and Groom Sets with
Black and White Rosaries. Beautiful Rosaries of Pearl, Sterling
Silver and Rock Crystal from $6.95.
—Write for detailed descriptions—
SPECIAL: St. Christopher Car Medals from 35c to
Sterling Silver at $2.00
RELIGIOUS ARTICLES
THE LOOK-IN SHOP
57 Fourth Avenue East Orange, N. J.
THOMSON - BLAND - LEE
\
Linens for Summe
12.95
White linen closed
pumps in mid-high
heel or high heel.
Add 25c Postage on
prepaid orders, plus
3% Sales Tax,
ATLANTA • DECATUR • WEST END « BUCKHEAD
Catholic Church Not a
Political Group Says
Archbishop of Boston
BOSTON. (NC) The Catholic-
Church belongs totally and exclu
sively to Christ and is not a po
litical organization, Archbishop
Richard J. Cushing of Boston told
the 30th annual convention of the
Newman Clubs of New England at
Emmanuel College here.
His declaration, aimed at anti-
Catholic criticism which holds that
the Church is governed by undem
ocratic principles, contained a
warning what conditions which be
fall the Church is communist dom
inated countries can happen here
and easily might if certain tenden
cies abroad in the land go unre
buked and undisciplined.
Archbishop Cushing said that to
talk of the Church in terms of de
mocracy, socialism, fascism or any
other “ism” is as pointless as it
would be to talk of Jesus Christ in
these terms. The Catholic Church,
he went on. is not a democracy for
it is not a political organization,
not a cultural society, not a debat
ing forum and it is not a religious
or philosophical parliament.
“I make no difference between
Christ and His Church, it is all
one,” the Archbishop declared.
“Christ did not come as a result
of a Plebiscite but by the sover
eign mandate of His Father. He
did not come as a result of resolu
tions adopted by men, however
high-minded they were.
“The Church is not the prop
erty of princes, prelates, nor the
property of the people totally. She
belongs to Jesus Christ in that
sense and in that sense only.
“Strictly spiritual, the Church
belongs totally to Jesus Christ,”
he said.
Archbishop Cushing recalled
that 14 years ago an international
Eucharistic Congress was held in
Budapest and more than half a mil
lion Hungarians participated. “If
any man said that night that it
could happen there you would have
been entirely justified in calling
him a fool, but it did happen and
in the city where the man saw
that demonstration of faith and
freedom tonight there could not
be more than five people—let
alone 800.000—banded together
without police chiefs and spies in
their midsts,” the Archbishop said.
These things could happen here
and they easily might. But in one
sense which every Catholic under
stands it doesn’t make any ulti
mate difference whether it happens
or not.
“Christ’s work will go on in nor-
Pastor in Athens
FATHER DONOVAN"
The Reverend Walter J. Dono
van, pastor of St. Joseph’s Church,
Athens, Georgia, who is also pastor
of St. Mary’s Church, Elberton, and
the missions at Hartwell, Monroe
and Winder.
Atlanta Public School
Superintendent Emeritus
Pisagrees With Conant
DUBUQUE'. Iowa. — (NC) — “I
dread to think of what would hap
pen to. America if all parochial
schools would close,” declared Dr.
William A. Sutton, superintendent
emeritus of the Atlanta. Georgia,
public schools, speaking before an
adult education forum at Washing
ton Junior High School here.
Dr. Sutton’s topic was “The Cri
sis in the Schools.” He said he
could not agree “with those who
say that the parochial school has
no place in our country.”
(At the April meeting in Boston
of the American Association of
School Administrators, President
James B. Conant of Harvard Uni
versity said “the greater the pro
portion of our youth who attend
independent schools, the greater
the threat to our democratic unity.”
He also declared that a dual sys
tem of secondary schools “serves
and helps to maintain group cleav
ages.”)
mal times under direction of the
Hierarchy, at all times under the
clergy’s direction, but “no matter
what happens if ne#d be in secret
or underground by devout laymen
and laywomen who are not passive
but active members of Jesus Christ
-—made so by their fidelity to their
Faith,” Archbishop Cushing declar
ed.
Georgia University
Students Hear Talk
By Bishop Hyland
ATHENS, Ga. — An unusually
large and appreciative audience,
made up of faculty members and
students of the University of Geor
gia. heard the Most Reverend
Francis E. Hyland, D. D., J. C. D.,
Auxiliary Bishop of Savannah-At-
lanta, deliver an address on “The
Catholic Church and Marriage,”
in the University Chapel on the
morning of April 30.
Bishop Hyland was introduced
to his audience by University
Chaplain Robert Ayers and Lowell
Kepp, of Brunswick, president of
the Newman Club at the University.
The appearance of Bishop Hy
land as a speaker upon the stage
of the University Chapel recalled
that on August 6, 1840, Bishpp
John England of Charleston spoke
to a student assembly in the same
building.
At the time Bishop England de
livered his address, more than a
century ago, Georgia was a part
of the Diocese of Charleston, and
the institution of learning which
is now the University of Georgia
was known as Franklin College.
Bishop Confirms
Classes in Athens,
Elberton, Hartwell
ATHENS, Ga.—On April 29, the
Most Reverend Francis E. Hyland,
D. D., J. C. D., Auxiliary Bishop
of Savannah-Atlanta, administered
the Sacrament of Confirmation to
eight children and thirteen adults
at St. Joseph’s Church here.
Bishop Hylad was assisted in the
administration of the Sacrament
by Father Walter J. Donovan, pas
tor of St. Joseph’s; Father Francis
X. Clougherty, O. S. B., assistant
pastor; Father Michael Manning,
of Gainesville; Father John Cream,
of Washington, and Father Michael
Regan, of Savannah.
That evening, Bishop Hyland
confirmed a class in Hartwell, and
on the following day administered
Confirmation at St. Mary’s Church,
Elberton.
MAY PROCESSION AT
CHURCH IN COLUMBUS
COLUMBUS, Ga —A large num
ber of children of the parish par
ticipated in the annual May pro
cession at the Church of the Holy
Family. Rosalie Ficker, daughter
of Captain and Mrs. Carl Ficker,
was selected by the pupils of St.
Joseph’s Academy to have the hon
or of placing a floral crown on
the statue of the Blessed Virgin.
Russian soldiers and a Stalin poster gaze out upon the immense crowds accompanying the return of tha
20-ton “Pummerin” bell to the reconstructed St. Stephen’s Cathedral in Vienna. The bell, damaged in
World War II, was carried in a long procession from Linz, in upper Austria, where it was repaired and
stored. It is shown passing the demarcation line at Enns Bridge as it entered the Russian Occupied
gone. Soviet officials allowed the worshippers to pass_without checking their papers. (NC PhotosJ