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FOURTEEN.
THE BULLETIN OF THE CATHOLIC LAYMEN’S ASSOCIATION OF GEORGIA
SEPTEMBER 29, 1956.
W. E. RAINES COMPANY
INCORPORATED
Building Specialties and Supplies
Watson Fly Screens - Metal Weatherstrips - Special
Equipment - Chain Link Fence - Waterproofing - Ex
pansion Joints - Fenestra Windows - Fire Doors - Struc
tural Steel - Ornamental Iron - Metal Specialties - Re
inforcing Steel - Overhead Garage Doors.
10-12-14 Seventh St. — Dial 2-5533 — Augusta, Georgia
R. E. Elliott Sons
Established 1896
MORTUARY
AUGUSTA, GEORGIA
^ Stoclton
an
cl Son
/
GENERAL CONTRACTORS
“Builders of Distinctive Homes”
BUILDING FOR OVER
HALF A CENTURY
J. H. STOCKTON
1316 Wilson St.
W. E. CLARK
P. O. Box 237
PHONE 3-5131
AUGUSTA, GEORGIA
Add resses Organists
MONTREAL, (NC)—“You, as
professional organists, can do,
must do, very much to bring home
to the people of our American
continent an intelligent appreci
ation of real music,” His Eminen
ce Paul Emile Cardinal Leger,
Archbishop of Montreal, told
members of the Canadian Col
lege of Organists.
The Cardinal spoke at a Pon
tifical Mass in St. Patrick’s church
for delegates attending the con
vention of the Canadian Collage of
Organists.
“There is at present a tendency
to confuse the idea of noise and
music,” the prelate said. “The
movies, radio and television do
much to foster this actual trend.”
He described the organ as “the
king of all instruments” and said
that John Sebastian Bach, “the
master organist and composer,”
was an inspiration to all organists.
Sister iosetta
Awarded Degree
AUGUSTA, Ga. — Sister Mary
Josetta, R. S.M., was awarded her
Master’s degree in Hospital Ad
ministration by Catholic Univer
sity of America at the close of
the summer session.
She is now Director of the
Nursing School at Mercy Hospital
in Baltimore. She was formerly
Miss Mary Stulb, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Charlie C. Stulb of
Augusta, Ga., members of St.
Mary’s parish.
Large Enrollment
At Sacred Heart
BELMONT,—The 1956-57 ses
sion began at Sacred Heart Junior
College in Belmont with an en
rollment of over 200.
McAuley Hall will be finished
by January, and will double the
accommodations at Sacred Heart.
This new addition will contain
lounges on each floor, and kit
chenette and launderette facilities
in addition to private and semi
private rooms. It is located be
tween the administration build
ing and the Alumnae Gymnasium
and is so arranged that students
may pass to all parts of the school
without going outside in incle
ment weather.
Unveil
Statue
People who are stuck up sel
dom stick up for each other.
Services For
Lt. Krelick
FORT BENNING, Ga.—Funeral
services for Lt. E. A. Kreilick
were held September 6th at the
Main Post Chapel, Chaplain F.
D. Bridenstine officiating.
Survivors are his wife, Mrs.
Daisy Brantley Kreilick, Colum
bus, his mother, Mrs. C. E. Krei
lick, Fremont; a son, Lt. Elvin A.
Kreilick Jr., . Fort Benning; a
daughter, Mrs. Hubert L. Odom,
Atlanta, two brothers, Lee Krei
lick, Fremont, and Grayson Krei
lick, Washington; two sisters Mrs.
Ralph Smith and Mrs. Carl Stine,
Fremont.
Some people find it easier to
believe a lie than to take the
time to prove it isn’t true.
Portraits
By
BREAULT
ARE LASTING MEMORIES!
COMMERCIAL PHOTOGRAPHY
... “That Tells The Story”
946 GREENE STREET
AUGUSTA, GEORGIA
' WEXFORD, Ireland, (NC)—A
crowd of some 20,000 Irishmen
and Americans applauded as
President Sean O’Kelly of Ire
land unveiled the statue of Com
modore John Barry given Ire
land by the people of the United
States.
The Catholic “Father of the
United States Navy” was born
in Wexford in 1745.
The American delegation taking-
part in the unveiling included
Ambassador William Howard
Taft III and Comdr. Edward L.
Beach, President Eisenhower’s
naval aide. Rep John J. Rooney
of New York, who has credited
an Irish-born Franciscan Brother
with the original idea for the
Barry statue, headed a group of
a dozen Members of Congress.
Irish leaders taking part in the
ceremonies included Prime Min
ister John A. Costello, Foreign
Minister Liam Cosgrave and form
er Premier Eamon de Valera.
The 12-foot bronze statue, the
work of New York sculptor
Wheeler Williams, was commis
sioned by Congress. One side of
its granite base bears the inscrip
tion:
“Presented to the people of Ire
land by the United States of
America 1956 in recognition of
Commodore Barry’s outstanding
contribution to the naval annals
of his adopted country. He was
born in County Wexford and is
buried in St. Mary’s Churchyard,
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.”
The tablet on the other side of
the pedestal reads:
“In command of the Lexington
in 1776 Barry captured the first
naval vessel taken by an Ameri
can man-o-war. In 1783 he fired
the Navy’s last shot of the Revo
lution. From 1794 until his death
in 1803 Barry was Senior commo
dore of the United States Navy.”
As part of the tribute to Barry,
the Irish government issued post
age stamps of two denominations
bearing pictures of the new statue.
President Eisenhower sent his
greetings to President O’Kelly on
the occasion of the unveiling, not
ing that just nine days earlier
the U. S. Navy had commissioned.
a new destroyer of the most
powerful class bearing Barry’s
name.
According to Congressman
Rooney, who headed the Ameri
can congressional delegation to
the ceremonies, the original idea
for the Barry statue came from a
Franciscan Brother who had once
been Mr. Rooney’s teacher in
New York. He was Wexford-born
Brother Adrian of St. Francis
Monastery, Manhattan, who died
last year.
Funeral For
Thomas A. Mack
FORT OGLETHORPE, Ga. —
Funeral services for Thomas A.
Mack were held September 11th
at St. Gerard Chapel, Rev. Father
Walter Kuhn, officiating.
Survivors are , his mother, Mrs.
Billie J. Mack, Chattahoochee,
Fla., and three other sisters, Mrs.
Wm. Hurlburt and Miss Clara
Mack, Middletown, Conn., and
Mrs. Harry Stonekemp, Wichita
Falls, Texas; four brothers, Jos
eph Mack, Fort Eustice, Va.; Paul
and Charles Mack, West Palm
Beach, Fla., and Billy Mack, New
York City.
The man who climbs a little
higher than the crowd will be s
target for the knockers.
The self-made man who boast
he is his own master might d
better by serving another.