St Marys Academy - Blue Star Yearbook (Austin, TX)

 - Class of 1949

Page 1 of 80

 

St Marys Academy - Blue Star Yearbook (Austin, TX) online collection, 1949 Edition, Cover
Cover



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Text from Pages 1 - 80 of the 1949 volume:

FOREWORD Because this is the Diamond Jubilee Year at Saint Mary’s Academy, we, the members of the year book staff, have chosen the Diamond Jubilee as the theme of our 1948-49 issue of THE BLUE STAR. We wish to perpetuate in such manner the memories of this year in the hearts of all the present Saint Mary's girls. In future years we hope they may glance through this volume and be reminded not only of the brief time they spent in our beloved school but also of its heritage of seventy-five years. CONTENTS FOREWORD LETTER FROM BISHOP REICHER HISTORY OF SAINT MARY’S ACADEMY WHATSOEVER THINGS ARE LOVELY SENIOR CLASS JUNIOR CLASS SOPHOMORE CLASS FRESHMAN CLASS ACTIVITIES GRADUATION DEDICATION Throughout seventy-five years numerous Sisters of the Holy Cross have generously given themselves to establish and perpetuate the ideal of Christian education at Saint Mary’s Academy, Austin, Texas. To these sisters and to all the Sisters of the Holy Cross, especially to Mother M. Rose Elizabeth, Superior General, this book is gratefully dedicated. In such manner we wish to show our appreciation for the priceless heritage which has been given our school by the efforts of its courageous leaders. Our prayer is that Our Blessed Mother, symbolized by THE BLUE STAR, may continue to guide the destiny of the Sisters of the Holy Cross and of Saint Mary’s Academy in Austin, Texas. DIOCESE OP AVSTIN CHANCERY OFFICE AVSTIN. TEXAS God’s Providence has chosen religious in- stitutions to assist the Church in the teaching of the Gospel to every nation. For seventy-five years the Sisters of the Holy Cross have been among us sharing the toil and sacrifice of the mission fields. They have been the humble ser- vants of God in bringing countless blessings to innumerable souls th r o u g h Catholic education and works of charity. In the name of our priests and our people we extend to the Sisters of the Holy Cross our sincerest congratulations and appreciation. May the Blessing of God and the protection of His Holy Mother strengthen the Holy Cross Sisters’ Community till the end of time. In this building the Sisters of the Holy Cross spent their first years in Austin, Texas. 11 was to th e rude cabin in the rear of the building that Mother M. Angela and Sister M. Raymond came in March of 1872. HISTORY OF SAINT MARY’S ACADEMY, AUSTIN, TEXAS The citizens of Austin, Texas barely had begun to carve new lives for themselves from the chaos following the Civil War when a call for Holy Cross recruits was sounded in their city. Mother M. Angela and Sister M. Raymond, in company with Father Sorin, arrived in Austin in March of 1872, only seven years after Lee’s surrender at Appommatox. Austin was then nothing more than a village whose ad- vantages were natural ones: the river, the hills, the valley. Mother Angela had come to this rough Texas town in answer to a plea from Father Nicholas Feltin, the pastor of Saint Mary’s Church. He wanted the Sisters of the Holy Cross to take over the administration of his parish school. Wisely, Mother Angela had accepted his offer, and thus were begun the labors of the Sisters of the Holy Cross in the capital of Texas. Because the sisters appointed to the new mission were late in arriving at Austin, Mother Angela and Sister M. Austin at first did all the work of teaching and cooking. The school, situated on the siteofwhat is now the sacristy of Saint Mary’s Cathedral, was nothing but a cabin consisting of two poorly furnished rooms. These rooms the sisters used as convent, dormitory, kitchen, classroom, parlor, and recreation hall. The beginnings of the Sisters of the Holy Cross in Austin were almost parallel to those of the Congregation during its early days of poverty and hardship in Bertrand, Michigan. By June, however, eighty pupils had enrolled at Saint Mary's School despite its lack of conveniences. At the close of the school year Mother Angela, satisfied with the progress of the new mission, returned to Indiana leaving Sister M. Mildred in charge as superior. During the next few years Saint Mary's acquired such a reputation for Christian education that its prestige increased as rapidly as its annual enrollment. By 1875 it became necessary to purchase a plot of ground ad- joining the school. On this site a new stone building was erected to provide both the sisters and the students with more commodious quarters. Although Saint Mary's Academy had already expanded twice since its founding, in 1882 it was deemed expedient for the sisters to find even more spacious grounds SaintMary’s Academy, 206 East Seventh Street, was the second build- ing occupied by the Sister s of the Holy Cross in Austin, Texas. From this building were graduated most of the academy’s present alumnae. upon which to build a school with the facilities adequate to care for the many girls eager to acquire a Catholic education. The spot p u r c h a s e d by the Congregation was one of the most historic in Texas. When Austin became the capital of the Re- public of Texas this ground had been appropriated for the residence of Mirabeau B. Lamar, second president of the Republic. Many epoch making events had taken place in the white frame building on the hill overlooking Austin. In later years the property was p u r c h a s e d by Governor Peter Bell for his residence. The sisters bought the plot from Mrs. Mary Duffau. Because the new Saint Mary's Academy was expected to become one of the outstanding schools for girls in the South, an imposing edifice of Texas stone was planned for the ground on the hill. In the summer of 1885 the four-story building was completed. For eleven years the academy continued to grow, but is rapid strides were not confined to spiritual and scholastic spheres alone. A large north wing had been added to the school in 1901. The year 1908 saw recognition of Saint Mary's superior instruction in the form of affiliation with the University of Texas. By 1913 the registration had reached a mark that is still a peak in the history of the school, and in the Fall of that same year the Alumnae Association was organized. A half-century of endeavor to bring Christ into the lives of countless girls through the medium of a Christian education was completed in 1924, the Golden Jubilee year. The high esteem in which the academy was held not only by its local friends but also by all who had felt its influence, no matter how indirectly, was demonstrated on the occasion of the Jubilee. Telegrams poured in fromallover the country. TheSisters of the Holy Cross received a cablegram of benediction from the Sovereign Pontiff himself. These evidences of regard were fitting tribute to the efforts of the Sisters of the Holy Cross, some of whom had actually given their lives in the service of Saint Mary's Academy. The depression of the 1930 s left its mark on Saint Mary's as it did on numerous other institutions throughout the land. But the academy survived the trials of those years because of the beautiful faith of sisters and pupils alike. Indeed, the hand of The Administration Building of Saint Mary’s Academy at Forty-first and Red River Streets, where Sisters of the Holy Cross will continue the work they began seventy-five years ago in Austin, Texas. God seems to have been raised in benediction over the Congregation of the Sisters of the Holy Cross since the beginning of their work in Austin. On a Sunday in April of 1947 citizens of Austin reading their morning papers were amazed to learn that Mother M. Rose Elizabeth, Superior General of the Sisters of the Holy Cross, had purchased for the Congregation the former E. H. Perry estate. On the ten acre plot in northeast Austin is a residence of Italian Renaissance architecture built of grey stucco and roofed with red tile. Terraced gardens surround the two main buildings. Through the lower part of the campus runs a small creek bridged by a picturesque arch of stone. These new quarters, although beautiful, were not spacious enough to provide adequate room for all the faculty and students. Therefore, in February of 1949 it was announced that construction would begin immediately upon three new buildings. There will be a chapel, a convent, and a classroom building erected on the campus. The buildings, which are still under construction, will be ready for occupancy in the Fall of 1949. It seems fitting that Saint Mary s Academy should begin a new program expansion during this year, the Diamond Jubilee year. In these new buildings the Sisters of the Holy Cross and their students will begin to shape the remaining twenty - five years which must elapse before the academy reaches its centenary. The seventy-five years be tw e e n the first small class in the cabin near Saint Mary’s Cathedral and the present academy have been years of struggle and years of triumph. The work is not yet completed and will not be until there are no more girls to throng the halls of Saint Mary’s. The sisters will continue to give their utmost in the effort to educate all the girls who come to them in the ways of a Mary- like life. Because the Sisters of the Holy Cross have given Austin a school whose excellence is material as well as spiritual, they deserve the praise and commenda- tion which their friends give them. Because throughout seventy-five years there has always been a sister to teach an eager mind, to soothe an uneasy spirit, or to love a lonely heart, the Sisters of the Holy Cross unreservedly deserve the love that each student, young and old, bears for them and for Saint Mary’s Academy of Austin, Texas. WHATSOEVER THINGS ARE LOVELY (For the Students of Saint Mary’s Academy — Past and Present) Whatsoever things are lovely. Lord of all loveliness, Let their eyes see.......... Your majesty in mountains, in the sea. In storms that shake the earth; Your constancy in changeless stars; Your simplicity in a field flower Or in the clear eyes of a child. Whatsoever things are lovely, Lord of all loveliness. Let their lives hold...... A faith that finds in the dull things of time The burning beauty of eternity; A hope that penetrates the clouds of fear To gaze upon the brightness of Your Face; And a love that encompasses the whole world As a small child clasps a treasured toy to its heart. Sister M. Lucy, C.S.C. THE SENIOR CLASS extends its greetings on this the DIAMOND JUBILEE YEAR of SAINT MARY’S ACADEMY SENIOR CLASS OFFICERS Vice-President . . . , President.......... Secretary Treasurer .Genevieve Joseph Charlene Swenson . Helen Sternnadl DOROTHY BECK New Braunfels, Texas Sodality, 45-49 Glee Club, 45-49 Class Secretary-Treasurer, 47-48 Vice-President of Sodality, 48-49 Publicity Committee Chairman, 47-48 Year Book Staff, 48-49 PHOEBE CUNNINGHAM Austin, Texas Sodality, 45-49 Glee Club, 45-49 GLORIA JOHNSON Austin, Texas Glee club, 45-46; 47-48 GLADYS GRAVIS Austin, Texas Glee Club, 47-49 President of Glee Club 48-49 Sodality, 47-49 Social Life Committee Chairman 48-49 Student Council, 48-49 LOUISE MATTHEWS Brownsville, Texas Glee Club, 46-47 Sodality, 46-49 Student Council, 48-49 Publicity Committee Chairman, 48-49 MARLENE JOSEPH Burnett, Texas Glee Club, 46-47 Sodality, 46-49 Class President, 46-47 Student Council, 46-49 Treasurer, 47-48 President, 48-49 GENEVIEVE JOSEPH Austin, Texas Glee Club, 45-49 Sodality, 45-49 Secretary of Sodality, 48-49 Class Secretary-Treasurer, 46-47 Student Council, 4 7-49 Secretary of Student Council, 47-48 Class Vice-President, 48-49 THERESA VALENTA Jarrell, Texas Sodality, 48-49 Glee Club, 48-49 Student Council, 48-49 Building and Grounds Committee Chairman, 48-49 THE JUNIOR CLASS extends its greetings on this the DIAMOND JUBILEE YEAR of SAINT MARY’S ACADEMY JUNIOR CLASS OFFICERS Vice-President . . . . President........... Secretary-Treasurer .... Jessie Flautt Theresa McLaughlin . . Shirley Mueller GRETCHEN BERKEY San Antonio, Texas HELEN BURNES Austin, Texas MYRTLE BURNES Austin, Texas MARY THERESA DERR Austin, Texas MARY MARGARET FEWELL Austin, Texas Theresa McLaughlin Austin, Texas KATHERINE HUGHES Austin, Texas SHIRLEY MUELLER Austin, Texas ESTHER PEREZ Austin, Texas JO ANN RICHTER Austin, Texas HELLEN WORTHINGTON THE SOPHOMORE CLASS extends its greetings on this the DIAMOND JUBILEE YEAR of SAINT MARY’S ACADEMY SOPHOMORE CLASS OFFICERS Vice-President . . . . President........... Secretary-Treasurer Mary Rubarth Claire Mayer Mary Maloney TAYDE SANTOS Muzquiz, Mexico URSULA ANN SMITH Austin, Texas FRESHMAN CLASS OFFICERS Annette Landry, President Cathy Viscardi, Secretary-Treasurer Tommie Dougherty, Vice-President FRESHMAN CLASS First row, left to right: Carole Frazier ,Mary Ann Merlo, Annette Landry, Rosalee Fewell, Aurora Rubio, Herlinda Lopez, Jane lie Joseph Second row, left to right: Josephine Salas, Sh ar on Hill, Frances Hembree, Joy c e Casiraghi, Marguarite Simms, Patricia O’Brien, Jeanne Gilkison Third row, left to right: Marjorie Hrunek, Agnes Marie Guerrero, Theresa Oliverez, Mary Jane Havelka, Dorothy Havelka, Sherley Askew Fourth row, left to right: Frances Struhall, Tommie Dougherty, Lena Nardecchia, Elizabeth Trousdale, Sylvia Pulliam, Catherine Moore Fifth row, left to right: Cathy Viscardi, Betty Jean Gardener, Tish Benton Sixth row, left to right: Barbara Jo Ealand, Frances Pfuntner,Pat Sabo, Gertrude Glasche, Sophie Castillo, Mildred Mokry THE SODALITY and STUDENT COUNCIL extend their greetings on this the DIAMOND JUBILEE YEAR of SAINT MARY’S ACADEMY THE STUDENT COUNCIL OF SAINT MARY’S ACADEMY The officers of the Student Council for the year 1948- 49 were: Marlene Joseph, President; Nancy Jane Newton, Vice President; Stella Moreno, Secretary; and Gretchen Berkey, T reasurer. The Student Council of Saint Mary’s Academy is the official voice of the studeni body, and a s such it plans many of the social activities for the school year. In addition to this, the members of the organization become familiar with parliamen- tary procedure and with the fundamentals of student government. The year 1948- 49 was an unusually active one for the group. Among the projects of the Student Council were the annual F ebruary Formal, the Miss Saint Mary’s elec- tion. Friendship D a y, a benefit luncheon, the yearly school picnic, and a movie sponsored for a mission fund. YEAR BOOK STAFF The members of the Ex- ecutive Staff of the 1948-49 year book wer e: Editor, Dorothy Beck; Assistant Editor, Nancy Jane Newton; Assistant Editor , Mary Ann McNamara; Business Man- ager, Jessie Flautt; Adver- t i s i n g Manager , Gretchen Berkey; Copy Editor , Gladys Gravis; Art Editor, Helen Burnes; Photography Editor, Helen Sternnadl; Circulation Manager, Theresa Valenta. All the members of the year book staff, including the editors and their assistants are pictured below. REVEREND THOMAS F. TIERNEY. C.S.P. As Chaplain and Spir itu al Director of Saint Mary’s Academy, the Reverend Thomas F. Tierney, S, S. P., has given generously of h i s time and devotion to both the school and the individual student during the past year. His genuine interest not only in the problems of Saint Mary’s girls but also in their activities has en- deared Father Tierney to all the s t u d e n t s who con- sider him a loyal and understanding friend. THE SODALITY OF OUR LADY The Sodality of Our Lady has for its g o al the guiding of souls to Christ through devotion to Mary. This year Sodalists came another step closer to the realization of their goal. The girls continued their weekly recitation of the Rosary as a group in the presence of the Most Blessed Sacrament, and in addition numerous Sodalists met in the chapel each after- noon to plead for world peace by praying the Rosary in honor of Our Lady of Fatima. The Sodal- ity was active also in spheres other than the spiritual. Sodalists, under the capable direction of Sister M. Florian, sponsored a Hallowe’en Party, a school bingo party, Christmas gift boxes for the poor, and the collection of religious articles for Catholic children in state institutions. As part of a program to spread Christian Doc- trine some Sodality members taught cat- echism once a weekto the Catholics at the Austin State School. The Catholic Book Fair, held during Catholic Book Week, rounded out a year of activity that was both meritorious and entertaining. OFFICERS OF THE SODALITY Lucille Valdez..................Prefect Dorothy Beck...............Vice-Prefect Genevieve Joseph..............Secretary Mildred Tavarez...............Treasurer Moderator.............Sister M. Florian THE ALUMNAE ASSOCIATION The Alumnae Association of SaintMary’s Academy was established onNovember 22, 191 3. This organ- ization has for its purpose the constant renewal of devotion to Saint Mary’s in the hearts of its mem- bers. Each alumna is given an opportunity to con- tribute her talents toward projects which benefit the academy spiritually as well as materially. Since 1921,when the Saint Mary’s Academy Alum- nae Association joined the International Federation of Catholic Alumnae, our alumnae has been work- ing toward the goal of “upholding the ideals of Catholic womanhood and formulating plans for the extention of Catholic education, Catholic literature and Catholic social work.” Officers for the 1948-49 term were: Mrs. R. E. Whitlock................. President Mrs. David T. Roche..............Vice-President Mrs. Edward Robinson, Junior . . .Vice-President Jane McNamara.........................Treasurer Frances Trautschold.........Recording Secretary Mrs. James B. N. Morris....................... Corresponding Secretary One of the highlights of the Alumnae Association’s social program this year was the tea given December the twelfth in honor of Mother M. Rose Elizabeth, C.S.C., Superior General of the Sisters of the Holy Cross. In the receiving line were Mrs. T. H. Davis, Mrs. R. E. Whit- lock, Mrs. Edward Robinson, Junior, Mother M. Rose Elizabeth, Sister M. Lucy, Sister Elisa Maria, Mrs. D. T. Roche, and Mother M. Loretella. CHRISTMAS CAROLING Each year it has been the custom of Saint Mafy's girls to gather at the acad- emy on the eve of their Christmas vacation for a caroling procession. Carrying lighted candles, the singer s walk two by two about the campus lifting their voices in the tradi- tional hymns :0,Holy Night, Hark, the Herald Angels Sing, Away in a Manger, and Silent Night, Holy Night. This year the spirit of Christmas was embodied in the lovely outdoor manger and in the immense tree with its myriad lights and decorations. I I SAINT MARY’S GIRLS IN SAN ANTONIO Twice a year groups of Saint Mary’s students travel to San Antonio on trips arranged to bring them in contact with both places of historic interest and events of cul- tural importance. During the Fall Semester safe 1 members of the Texas History and Ameri- can History classes visited the old Spanish missions, and in February the academy was well represented at the annual opera. MISS SAINT MARY’S OF 1949 For several years it has been an e stablished tradition to elect that mem- ber of the senior class who best embodies all the qualities of an ideal Saint Mary’s girl to be Miss Saint Mary’s. This high- est social distinction which can come to a graduate was bestowed upon Dorothy Beck by the member s of the student body. Dorothy Beck, Miss Saint Mary’s of 1949, is presented w i th a bouquet of roses by Marlene Joseph, President o f the Student Council, the campus organization which sponsors the election. Presentation of Miss Saint Mary’s was made at the annual February Formal. The annual February Formal, sponsored by the Student Council, was held in the Maximillian Room of the Driskill Hotel, Friday the twenty-fifth of February. Senior-Junior Prom-trotters did their waltzing on the south patio of the academy, the evening of April twenty-first. SAINT MARY’S ACADEMY GLEE CLUB The Glee Club has long been one of the most popular organizations on the campus. Open to students from all classes, it provides an opportunity for those interested in choral work both to study and to practice the techniques of this type of singing. This year Gladys Gravis was elected to be president of the club, which has weekly meetings throughout each semester. Once during the school year the singers present a pro- gram, usually an operetta or a concert, in w h i c h all the members of the group participate. As Director of the Glee Club, Sister Mary Assumpta has endeared her- self to all its members because of her willingness to give generously of her know- ledge and time to all who need her help. MADONNA EVENING The Sodality of Our Lady at SaintMary’s Academy climax- es each school year of activity with Madonna Evening. Tra- ditionally, the evening of the first Sunday in May is the one set aside for this beautiful program d e d i c a t e d to Our Blessed Mother. Sodality members form a living Rosary e d i c t i o n f r o m the flower- banked altar in the loggia. The members of the Court this year were : Lucille Valdez, Dorothy Beck, Mildred T a v a r e z , Genevieve Joseph, MaryMar garet Fewell, Dolores Callahan, Gladys Gravis, and Mary Ann Steele. and, singing May hymns in nonor of Mary, they walk in procession about the .campus. The recitation of the Rosary and Benediction of the Most Blessed Sacrament bring the evening to a close. Madonna Evening was especially lovely a t Saint Mary’s Academy this year. The procession which started at the north entrance, slowly wended its way across the west lawn to the patio. There the girls re- cited the prayers of the Rosary. At the end of each decade a bouquet of roses gathered from the ten girls was placed near a statue of the Blessed Mother. When the Rosary was completed the Prefect of the Sodal- ity, Lucille Valdez, and her Court crowned the statue of Our Lady with a wreath of white roses. Reverend William Beston, C. S. C., of Saint Edward’s University, was the principal speaker. Reverend Gerard Maguire, C. S. P., gave Ben- Saint Mary’s girls are athletic girls. They participate actively in all the sports offered them; however, baseball and volleyball seem to be the reigning favorites. Under the direction of Sister M. William, students in the physical train- ing classes did their “daily dozens.' CATHOLIC BOOK FAIR In connection with both Catholic Book Week and Catholic Press Month, members of the Sodality arranged a Catholic Book Fair, On one Sunday in each of the parish churches girls were gathered in the vestibule to take orders for Catholic books and mag- Religious pamphlets and books were sold also. The project was a profitable one primarily because it gave the girls ex- perience in dealing with the problem of placing Catholic lit- erature before the public. THE SENIOR CLASS OF 1949 First row, left to right: Genevieve Joseph, Gloria Johnson, Gladys Gravis, Helen Sternnadl Second row, left to right: Dolores Renck, Shirley Jean Thompson, Lucille Valdez, Jo Ann Peters Third row, left to right: Theresa Valenta, Marlene Joseph, Dolores Callahan, Phoebe Cunningham, Jane Louise On, Dorothy Beck Fourth row, left to right: Alice Valenta, Charlene Swenson, Louise Matthews, Mildred Tavarez, Margie Fleet, Nancy Jane Newton CLASS OF 1949 HONOR STUDENTS Nancy Jane Newton, of Austin, Texas, re- ceived the Valedictorian Medal for maintain- ing the highest scholastic average over a period of four years. Dorothy Beck, of New Braunfels, Texas, ranked second in scholastic excellence, and for this she received the Salutatorian Medal. The Honor Student Medal was awarded to Genevieve Joseph, of Austin, Texas, for the third highest scholastic rec- ord achieved during the four years of high school. Dorothy Beck, also recipient of the medal for Religion, was presented the annual Christian Doctrine Award made by the Alumnae Asso- ciation to the graduate earning the highest scholastic average in Religion over a four year period. Marlene Joseph, of Burnet, Texas, received the Citizenship Medal for her contribution toward maintaining a high stand- ard of school citizenship both individually and among her classmates. The Leadership Medal was awarded to Charlene Swenson of Austin, Texas, who displayed those qualities of leadership so necessary in her position as class president. To Dolores Callahan, of Bastrop, Texas, went the Activities Medal as recognition of her unfailing school spirit and enthusiastic support of each Saint Mary’s activity. The Senior class of Saint Mary’s Acad- emy was graduated in Saint Mary’s Cathedral on the evening of May t w e n ty-sixth. The Most Reverend Louis J. Reicher, Bishop of Austin, awarded diplomas to the twenty graduates. The principal speak- er of the evening was the Right Reverend Frederick O. Beck, of Victoria, Texas. He stressed the im- portance of adhering to a Christian pattern o f living b y admon- ishing the graduates to “seek ye first the Kingdom of God” be- fore searching for the treasures of the world. GRADUATION OF THE CLASS OF 1949 Assisting His Excel- le n c y on the altar were Right Reverend Joseph Valenta, of La Porte, Texas; Right Reverend Frederick O. Beck, of Victoria Texas;R e ve r end James J. O’Brien, C.S.C., of Saint Ed- ward's University; Reverend Clement H. Funke, C.S.C., and Reverend Francis Sullivan, C. S. C. all of Austin. SCARBROUGH SONS extends its greetings on this the DIAMOND JUBILEE YEAR of SAINT MARY’S ACADEMY M i ' THE AUSTIN NATIONAL, BANK extends its greetings ( on this • the DIAMOND JUBILEE YEAR ' of ] SAINT MARY’S ACADEMY ■ c W ' BECKER LUMBER COMPANY A. J. MALONEY COMPANY extends its greetings extends its greetings f on this on this t the DIAMOND JUBILEE YEAR the DIAMOND JUBILEE YEAR 1 of of SAINT MARY’S ACADEMY SAINT MARY’S ACADEMY „ CAPITAL NATIONAL BANK extends its greetings on this the DIAMOND JUBILEE YEAR of SAINT MARY’S ACADEMY CABANISS FURNITURE T. H. WILLIAMS COMPANY extends its greetings extends its greetings on this on this the DIAMOND JUBILEE YEAR the DIAMOND JUBILEE YEAR of of SAINT MARY’S ACADEMY SAINT MARY’S ACADEMY AMERICAN NATIONAL BANK extends its greetings on this the DIAMOND JUBILEE YEAR of SAINT MARY’S ACADEMY n 'P $ SNYDER’S SMART SHOP YELLOW CAB COMPANY extends its greetings extends its greetings on this on this the DIAMOND JUBILEE YEAR the DIAMOND JUBILEE YEAR of of SAINT MARY’S ACADEMY SAINT MARY’S ACADEMY DILL’S 312 Barton Springs Road Phone 7-4474 extends its greetings on this the DIAMOND JUBILEE YEAR of SAINT MARY’S ACADEMY our 'Ptotne % ukc4 CALCASIEU ■ps 5? - ZiMee %%3 I LIMBEI nil MIC MATERIALS HOME DECOIATIOI APPUAICES All COIOITIOIIIG | CALCASIEU LUMBER COMPANY extends its greetings on this the DIAMOND JUBILEE YEAR of SAINT MARY’S ACADEMY GREEN PASTURES extends its greetings on this the DIAMOND JUBILEE YEAR of SAINT MARY’S ACADEMY SAINT MARY’S ACADEMY ALUMNAE ASSOCIATION extends its greetings on this the DIAMOND JUBILEE YEAR of SAINT MARY’S ACADEMY PREWITT CREAMERY JOHN BREMOND COMPANY | extends its greetings extends its greetings t on this on this 1 the DIAMOND JUBILEE YEAR the DIAMOND JUBILEE YEAR of of , SAINT MARY’S ACADEMY SAINT MARY’S ACADEMY DR. PEPPER BOTTLING COMPANY HOWELL’S SERVICE STATION extends its greetings extends its greetings on this on this the DIAMOND JUBILEE YEAR the DIAMOND JUBILEE YEAR of of SAINT MARY’S ACADEMY SAINT MARY’S ACADEMY . fr i GOAD MOTOR COMPANY H. M. OETTING FURNITURE ' extends its greetings extends its greetings on this on this the DIAMOND JUBILEE YEAR the DIAMOND JUBILEE YEAR i of of ' SAINT MAR Y’S ACADEMY SAINT MARY’S ACADEMY A 1' TIPS ENGINE WORKS MEARS STUDIO ’ extends its greetings extends its greetings on this on this the DIAMOND JUBILEE YEAR the DIAMOND JUBILEE YEAR of of SAINT MARY’S ACADEMY SAINT MARY’S ACADEMY FIDELITY STATE BANK YA RING’S f extends its greetings extends its greetings on this on this ’ the DIAMOND JUBILEE YEAR the DIAMOND JUBILEE YEAR of of SAINT MARY’S ACADEMY SAINT MARY’S ACADEMY ■l L SCHAFFER’S r INDEPENDENT OIL COMPANY extends its greetings extends its greetings on this on this the DIAMOND JUBILEE YEAR the DIAMOND JUBILEE YEAR of of SAINT MARY’S ACADEMY SAINT MARY’S ACADEMY R —- — 1' ?D S)( xrw- PATRONS f -J SU l- 1 V BIRELE Y’S 3500 East 5th Street MAJESTIC CLEANERS 600 Brazos JOSEPH’S MAN SHOP 127 East 6th Street MARTIN PLUMBING AND HEATING 116 Congress SUN SPOT BOTTLING COMPANY TONY’S CAFE 1618 East 6th Street 4822 East 1st Street L. EAST PRODUCE COMPANY 708 East 8th Street I J. R. REED MUSIC COMPANY 805 Congress McNamara’s bakery East 1 st Street WHITES PHARMACY y, 523 Congress K-Zpiyi.p+jL ' r HYLTIN-MANOR FUNERAL HOME ZALES JEWELER Y 11 04 Gudalupe Q 619 Congress i Vj MR. MRS. S. A. MUELLER MR. C. A. DYE ,44- 3 FRANCES AND JACK £jnr£: _ 3, ' OA4 ‘ - , -4 - • - j 44 4 $ - ■ - - M . -,.y -o 3 m-£c£ s) AUTOGRAPHS


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