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P QIHHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIllllIllllIllIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllIIIIllIIITTIIllIlIIIllIllIllIIIllIlillllllllllllllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHHIIIIIIIIlllllllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIHIHNNNIHHHHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIVIIIIHHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIWHW U55 URSULI E 7940 46 xr i E :Quinta 93354 ana! gbauf uuana cqaacfamky cumzcmfamg ffm iNIHHIIHIIIIIIIIIIIH IIHH141N1VlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIHNIIIINVlll1111lIIllllIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIKlIIIIIKIKIlIIIllIIIIIKIllIINIIUIHWIHHHIIIIIIIIIllIIIIHIIIllIIIIIIIIIIHIVIIIllIIIIIlIHHlIllll!lllIllllllIIIIIllllIIIIIllIIIllllllIIIIIIIIIllIIIIIIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll Salloof B553 Throughout the land their echo rings And each clear tone a vision bringsg The Nation's strength and hope and pride Through far-off years will still abide- While school bells ring. Above the din of crowded street, 'Mid ceaseless tread of hurried feet, Through fruitful fields of countryside, Where hamlets 'neath the mountain hide- The school bells ring. Their music tells of opened doors To Education's richest stores. The hand is trained, the mind is freed The heart is stirred by Word and deed- Where school bells ring. Where'er young lives are taught aright That truth and justice are man's mightg That Virtue in the heart must reign, That honor towers o'er the brain- There school bells ring. Ring out, school bells, across the skyg Proclaim the Cause that neier shall die Through distant time, in ev'ry clime Where men lift eyes to heights sublime- Let school bells ring. gl' IIB THE 1940 U' unsuum: 22-.Q . O'Z50D'O'Z The day will hardly dawn when literature goes out of use. That were impossible, so long as the heart of man remains what it always has been. For the words of a master, in his choicer passages, have somehow managed to capture such elemental realities as birth, death, tears, love, laughter, and whatever else goes to make up the soul's experiences-any soul's, every soul's. Such language holds a universal appeal, and is found as enjoyable and neces- sary in a mansion as in some tumble-down excuse of a house. Literature cuts through such accidents of birth, superficialities of place, and gets down to the rock bottom of human nature which all races in all ages possess in common. It puts on display every sort of discovery from the deepest recesses of the heart. It tells all about that small, mysterious, red and pul- sating Workshop: how it can aspire, how it can envy, exult, hate, fear, grieve, rejoice and pray-how, above everything else, it can love. . For which reason it is delight to find so splendid an incen- tive to the little womenl' of Ursuline Academy as this booklet. It opens to them an opportunity to try their hand at the art, and see the result in print. It affords them, in these days of their commencing womanhood, an easy chance to exhibit their little experiences of what has been, and their romantic dreams of what they dare to hope will be. And if they are guilty of any shortcomings in the attempt, those very faults will have the charm of youthfulness, and be easily forgiven. That's why I feel confident that the reader of this Year- book will not be disappointed unless he belongs to the twenty or thirty in the whole world not interested in young woman- hood, and to the three or four who fail to admire young womanhood, with Catholic ideals. Literature, it seems, has never quite been able to let the women alone, especially the young ones, but here it is right from the pen of the young ones themselves-the students of Ursuline Academy. -Rev. Valentine Long, O.F.M. THE 194D ' 'X URSULINE Uzigufe go Que giddgiii A builder builded a temple, He wrought it with grace and skillg Pillars and groins and arches All fashioned to work his will. Men said as they saw its beauty 'It shall never know decay. Great is thy skill, 0 builder: Thy fame shall endure for aye.' A teacher builded a temple With loving and infinite careg Planning each arch with patience, Laying each stone with prayer. None praised her unceasing efforts, None knew of her wondrous plan, For the temple the teacher builded Was unseen by the eyes of man. Gone is the builder's temple, Crumbled into the dust, Low lies each stately pillar, Food for consuming rust. But the temple the teacher builded Will last While the ages roll, For that beautiful unseen temple Is a chi1d's immortal soul. Dscficafiolz As an expression of our respect for those whom we revereas our Spiritual Leaders and Teachers, as a token of our love for those Whom we cherish as sincere friends, We, the Graduating Class of 1940, most gladly dedicate this Yearbook. VLLTLLLZQIZE cqcaafsmy gaaufiy, 7959-7940 REVEREND FATHER BONIFACE, O.MiCap., Superintendent SISTER MARY CHARLES, O.S.U., Religion SISTER MARY ANGELINA, O.S.U., English and History SISTER ' SISTER SISTER SISTER SISTER MARY JOSETTA, O.S.U. French and Latin AGNES MARIE, O.S.U., Mathematics and Science MARY EUNICE, O.S.U., Commercial Department MARY LEONITA, O.S.U., Orchestra JEANNE THERESA, O.S.U., Glee Club and Music MRS. WILLIAM MARTZ, Sewing MRS. LEO LEASURE, Athletics MR. LEO H. LEY, Sr., Dramatics MISS LYDIA MILLMAN, Physical Education MRS. FRANK W. KREMER, Domestic Science THEE 1940 URSULINE a.: N CRIB Rev. Boniface Weckman, O. M. Cap. Ufzigufs A deep sense of gratitude leads us at the end oi' our high school career to pay tribute to Father Boniface, our kind pastor for eight years. Out debt to him is incalculable for his servicehas been a spiritual service, measurable only by the scales of the infinite. Since the first day we entered Ursuline Academy, Reverend Father has taken great interest in all our undertakings. In his keen understanding of youth, he made many a way smooth through sympathy, tactful advice, and kindness. Generosity is one of his predominant virtues, and never a day passed without someone benefiting by this characteristic. In him is placed the confi- dence of every student from the most bewildered, and perhaps dejected, Freshman, to the most dignified Senior. Reverend Father encouraged in temporal endeavers as Well as in spiritual. Ursuline Students will always pray for Father Boniface, who has given unsparingly of service and devoted kindness. if 4 it Culp, THE 194D upnsuuus .ima .5 to Qzacfuafaa My dear Graduates, ' The most suitable message for your Commencement is the word addressed by the Teacher of all teachers to His disciples on their commencement: And I have appointed you, that you should go, And should bring forth fruit, And- your fruit should remain. CJohn XV, 165. Your Alma Mater, the Ursuline Academy, has tutored you for the past four years. Under her guidance your mind has been developed, your will trained, your character refined, your memory stored with ideals, your education within her scope completed. The Academy speaks to you, her children, with the Divine Teacher, that you should go and should bring forth fruit. The planting is completed, she now looks for the harvest. Carry aloft the torch of your holy Faith. Let your Faith shine in your daily life, in your words,-in your works. Thus you will bring forth fruit unto life eternal. Your Faith must ever remain the guiding star of your future. Let every action in your life bear the seal of this divine gift. Let your mind, with the knowledge gained, lead you ever higher and higher to the truths eternal. Let your will be inseparably yoke-d to Christ's maxims and perfect obedience to His laws and those of His Church. He will observe your conduct, He will look for the fruits. The Church, with motherly concern, expects you to be an honor to her, to your Faith, to your- selves. In the days to come you will hear opinions expressed that are dia- metrically opposed to your ideals. You will see and hear of deeds that stand in direct opposition to the teachings of Christ and of His Church and your Alma Mater. You will be allured by false and deceitful promises. The path of vice will seem so very inviting. The steep and rugged climb of duty and virtue will appear so uninviting. Do not falter in your step. Let the Divine Commencement Speaker urge you onward and upward with His promise, I have appointed you, that you should go, and should bring forth fruit, and your fruit should remain. Fr. BONIFACE. .gcazzaa fiom fpsfefz mmf Qpuuf CHMQE Venite Adoremusn The Babe of Bethlehem Come to Earth. The Sword of Sorrow hath pierced her heart. Q 1940 i f? 1 unsqrfg wk' Uzigufa U0 Lowa fpazsnta . . So many things you do for us As the years go marching on- Far too seldom have we remembered In the days that are past and gone. Our childish hearts were thoughtless, Our minds on our work and playg Yet you've kept on giving us tender care With no thought of thanks or pay. But the Future lies before us, And God grant we may not forget- Help us to live so the coming days Will carry no vain regret. And today We make this loyal pledge With hope and courage new: To make you happy, and proud, and glad, For we owe so much to you! THE 1940 URSULINE as Qx THE 1940 ll unsuuiua PJ IIB faux Dfiaza President ....4,..., Mary Frances Kelly Vice-President .,.... Virginia Nierman Treasurer .' .... I . . . Marie King ' Secretary . , . . , . Irene Ley Class Colors : Orchid and Yellow Class Flower: Yellow Rose Class Motto : No Victory Without Labor endow . . 'rl-IE 194D U' uRsuuNE ewkx l MARGARET MARY CANNING Midland, Maryland 3 C.S.M.C.1,2,3,4 t Our Lady's Mission Workers 1, 2, 3, 4 1 Glee Club 1, 2, 3, 4 Secretary Glee Club 4 French Club 3, 4 Latin Club 1, 2 Sewing 1, 3, 4 Basketball 1, 2 Class Mission Officer 2 Ursuline Thespians 3, 4 Physical Education 4 l SUE HELEN GREENE 311 Fayette Street Cumberland, Maryland 'ALM Owwiv Glee Club 1, 2, 3, 4 9 Sewing 1 an C.S.M.C.1,2,3,4 MW Mission President 3 Q Q A Class Secretary 2 my Class President 3 Mx Our Lady's Mission Workers, Recording 'B' ' Secretary 3 1, I 9 ,,, Our Lady's Mission Workers, Correspond- KM ing Secretary 4 . C. S. M. C. Delegate 2 MLM! W French Club 3, 4 Member of Art Committee 1, 2, 3, 4 Attendant to May Queen 3 Orchestra 1 Latin Club 1, 2 Domestic Science 4 . ROSEMARY FLAGG 23 North Waverly Terrace Cumberland, Maryland Glee Club 1, 2, 3, 4 Pianist for Glee Club 1, 2, 3 C. S. M. C. 4 French Club 3 Latin Club 1, 2 Our Lady's Sodality 1, 2, 3, 4 Physical Education 1 Domestic Science 4 ,OW 1 Qfiqf Cumberland, Maryland Jiifffef' 'fri Glee Club 1, 2. 3, 4 Mission Secretary 4 Paladin Leader 4 French Club 3. 4 Ursuline Thespians 3, 4 C. S. M. C. 1, 2, 3, 4 Catechism Instructor 3 Delegate, National C.S.M.C. Convention 3 Our Lady's Mission Workers 1, 2, 3, 4 Physical Education 4 Chairman, Remailing Committee 4 Latin Club 1, 2 JESSIE HELENE HAWKINS 109 South Smallwood Street aaa-, AGNES HELMSTETTER l LaVale, Maryland Glee Club 1, 2, 3, 4 Q c. s. M. c. 1,2,3,4 LWJU French Club 3, 4 Ursuline Thespians 3, 4 fL 'J Assistant Librarian 3 J Vice-President of Glee Club 4 QC: VA' Latin Club 1, 2 Our Lady's Mission Workers 1, 2, 3, 4 Physical Education 4 av 8-HaJs6lm,,.,, jak CATHERINE LOURDINE JACKSON f 19 Washington Street Frostburg, Maryland Sewing 1, 2 Glee Club 1, 2. 3, 4 C. S. M. C. 1, 2, 3, 4 Class Treasurer 1 French Club 1, 2 Class Mission Treasurer 2, 4 Latin Club 1, 2 Physical Education 4 Assistant Editor of Ursuline 4 Our Lady's Mission Workers, 1, 2, 3, 4 Domestic Science 4 THE 194D URSULINE alk ',1. . . 1 JIM! Afvegf pf ff. ' q,,,,6, I , . 11' N ' - . 'I' f A , ' ' ' ' l , 1 1 k,,ffvv.,g4 1, I 1 ' fffffn-I if-ln QA ,sf WMA W wxjjff WSJ 4 .5 we MTN dy Lac. fi MWXKPJ X 270,85 , .- , L1,5y.,,x..m,, C,qfvwA.vvt l . M Jgnxfkd' VWQXWL ,X Pgkfxauvf Nix V 'U .1'q, ga , fs fn! MARY FRANCES KELLY 212 North Lee Street Cumberland, Maryland Class President 4 Glee Club 1, 2, 3, 4 Basketball 1, 2, 3 Sewing 1 French Club 3, 4 Latin Club 1, 2 Ursuline Thespians 3, 4 C. S. M. C. 1, 2, 3, 4 Our Lady's Mission Workers, Vice-Presi- dent 3 Class Vice-President 3 Paladin Leader 3, 4 Parliamentarian, Local Conference C. S. Q M. C. 4 Personnel Secretary, Local Conference C. S. M. C. 3 HELEN WARD KERBER 501 Fayette Street Cumberland, Maryland Class President 1 Class Mission Secretary 2 Class Mission President 4 Sewing 2 Basketball 1 French Club 3, 4 C. S. M. C. 1, 2, 3, 4 Glee Club 1, 2, 3, 4 Catholic Action Summer Teacher 3 Ursuline Thespians 3, 4 Latin Club 1, 2 Physical Education 4 MARIE KING 428 Cumberland Street Cumberland, Maryland Sewing 1, 2, 3, 4 Class Treasurer 3, 4 C. S. M. C. 1, 2, 3, 4 French Club 3, 4 Glee Club 1, 2, 3, 4 Our Lady's Mission Workers 1, 2, 3, 4 Latin Club 1, 2 Ursuline Thespians 3, 4 Physical Education 4 Vice-President. Our Lady's of Lourdes Mission Unit 2 4 it awp, THE 1940 URSULINE X CNE THE 1940 AP 'B URSULINE V DORIS KOTSCHENREUTHER 751 Kelly Boulevard Cumberland, Maryland Librarian of Senior Class 4 French Club 3, 4 Parliamentarian and Shield Correspon- dent 4 Ursuline Thespians 3, 4 Glee Club 1. 2, 3, 4 C. S. M. C. 1, 2, 3, 4 Latin Club 1, 2 Physical Education 4 Art Committee 4 Our Lady's Mission Workers 1, 2, 3, 4 Domestic Science 4 IRENE LEY 805 Braddock Road Cumberland, Maryland Sewing 1 Basketball 3, 4 C. S. M. C. 1, 2, 3, 4 Class Mission President 1, Treasurer 3 Class Treasurer 25 Secretary 4 ' Social Secretary 2 Western Maryland Conference, C.S.M.C. 3 C. S. M. C. Delegate 2 Glee Club 1, 2, 3, 4 President, Our Lady's Mission Workers 4 Paladin Leader 3 Ursuline Thespians 3, 4g Recording Sec'y Western Md. Conference, C.S.M.C. 4 French Club 3,4: Latin Club 1, 2 Catholic Action Summer School Teacher 3 MARY KATHLEEN MORAN Mt. Savage, Maryland Sewing 1 C. M. S. C. 1, 2, 3, 4 Basketball 1, 2 Glee Club 1, 2, 3, 4 President, Glee Club 4 Class Mission Vice-President 3 French Club 3, 4 Our Lady's Mission Workers 1, 2, 3, 4 Ursuline Thespians 3, 4 Physical Education 4 X iw, WZ?-EW WM' fM ',, S S filly: .vows iS eiQ,.fJ ,fnae ffljff 9M Wfjjw- igf Aww M233 45524 gk' allgx 'N 'rl-IE 1940 unsuuns 7814,-va'-f-abou., fini ,4..,1., iz... fees LL., ...lzzw S.,....,.f- LTI, JL.. I . 9? 61-'VGQ'--it-. f5.,.,1,,..g..Jl.., fZ4 4-'IJ I... M-1.,,,. lil ai TQQTJLA ...JL 91,04-4fw f'fi'Jf Ui-Afrr-4w-'vA 'V L' Zo-v-tu 64 4.1.1165 fa imafvuklfol OZZWJ iff' VIRGINIA NIERMAN 700 Sylvan Avenue Cumberland, Maryland Sewing 1, 2 Basketball 1, 2, 3 Glee Club 1, 2, 3, 4 Class Secretary 3 Class Vice-President 4 Class Mission Treasurer 2 Class Mission Secretary 1 Latin Club 1, 2 - French Club 3, 4 Domestic Science 4 Ursuline Thespians 3, 4 Contestant in C. S. M. C. Oratorical Contest 4 ' JANE PEDDICORD 423 Louisiana Avenue Cumberland, Maryland C. S. M. C. 1, 2, 3, 4 Class Mission President 3 Class President 2 Class Mission Secretary 1 Our Lady's Mission Workers 1, 2, 3, 4 Ursuline Thespians 3, 4 Sewing 1, 2 French Club 3, 4 Glee Club 1, 2, 3, 4 Our Lady's Mission Workers, Treasurer 4 Paladin Leader 4 Delegate C. S. M. C. National Convention 3 Delegate, C. S. M. C. Rally, Frederick 1 Basketball 1 Catholic Action Summer School Teacher 3 Physical Education 4 Domestic Science 4 HELEN PORTER 113 Paw Paw Way Cumberland, Maryland Glee Club 1, 2, 3, 4 C. S. M. C. 1, 2, 3, 4 French Club 3, 4 Ursuline Thespians 3, 4 Latin Club 1, 2 Our Lady's Mission Workers 1, 2, 3, 4 Physical Education 4 Sewing 1, 2, 3. 4 DOROTHY CECELIA REED 220 Beall Street Cumberland, Maryland - Our Lady's Mission Workers 1, 2, 3, 4 C. S. M. C. 1, 2, 3, 4 Glee Club 1, 2, 3, 4 Glee Club Treasurer 4 Assistant Librarian 3 French Club 3, 4 Ursuline Thespians 3, 4 V Latin Club 1, 2 W in ilu! Sewing 1 Physical Education 4 DOROTHY VIRGINIA REINHARD 608 Greene Street Cumberland, Maryland Glee Club 1, 2, 3, 4 Basketball 1 C. S. M. C. 1, 2, 3, 4 French Club 3, 4 C. S. M. C. Delegate 3 Ursuline Thespians 3, 4 - Latin Club 1, 2 ' Our Lady's Mission Workers 1, 2, 3, 4 Reporter of School Paper 3 Editor of Ursuline 4 DA Margaret Mary Canning, October 11, 1922 Rosemary Flagg, August 15, 1922 Sue Greene. November 21, 1922 Jessie Hawkins, June 13, 1922 Agnes Helmstetter, August 1, 1923 Helen Kerber, April 26, 1922 Marie King. June 19, 1921 ' Catherine Jackson, March 29, 1923 Qui Buztgcfayi ' ' 4 Mary Frances Kelly, August 26, 1922 Helen Porter, March 29, 1921 Jane Peddicord, April 27, 1921 Irene Ley, August 18, 1922 Kathleen Moran, October 12, 1922 Virginia Nierman, July 3, 1922 . Dorothy Reinhard, April 14, 1922 Doris Kotschenreuther, January 8, 1923 Dorothy Reed, September 30, 1922 THE 1940 Af URSULINE 'A' 2,3 iffy of wff? J' my J, . My THE 194D Sue Greene Agnes Helmstetter Marie King Rosemary Flagg Dorothy Reed Helen Porter Catherine Jackson Dorothy Reinhard Irene Ley Jessie Hawkins Jane Peddicord Margaret Mary Canning Helen Kerber Kathleen Moran Doris Kotschenreuther Virginia Nierman Mary Frances Kelly HIAIF A Nationality Race Disposition American Brunette Pleasing American Brunette Gentle American Brunette Gentle American Blond Fairly Good American Brunette General American Blond Good American Brunette Pleasing American Brunette Kind Hearted American Blond Jolly American Blond Gentle American Brunette Gentle American Brunette Pleasing American Blond Jolly American Brunette Pleasing American Blond Gentle American Brunette Genial American Blond Changeable URSULINE Life's Ambition Technician Nurse Nurse Musician Nurse Care of Children Lawyer Buyer of Textiles Kindergarten Teacher Mathematician Teacher Study Music Teacher Dancer Singer Nurse Interior Decorator Daz 04055651 Margaret Mary Canning, Scrap Book. Rosemary Flagg, Music Sue Greene, Collecting Miniature Souvenirs Jessie Hawkins, Collecting Yearbooks Agnes Helmsitetter, Singing Helen Kerber, Dancing Marie King, Collecting Foreign Dressed Dolls Catherine Jackson, Collecting Post Cards Mary Frances Kelly, Photograph Albums and College Pen nants Helen Porter, Collecting Pictures of Friends and Pennants Jane Porter, Collecting Souvenirs and Snapshots Irene Ley, Pictures of Drum Majors and Snapshots foi Photo Album Doris Kotschenreurther, Collecting Dutch Dolls and Snap shots Dorothy Reed, Roller Skating THE 1940 I URSULINE Color of Eyes Favorite Author Deep Blue Edgar Allen Poe Brown Gene Stratton Porter Hazel Gene Stratton Porter Dark Brown Blue Brown Brown Brown Brown Light Blue Lloyd C. Douglas Mark Twain Longfellow Sir Walter Scott Faith Baldwin Lloyd C. Douglas Longfellow Bluish Gray James Hilton Gray Blue Hazel Blue Gray Green dana Svtafiafice The oldest member-Jane Peddicord The youngest member-Agnes Helmstetter Class heaVYW0iZhff-Helen PPPWT Class featherweighb-Cathenne Jackson most studious member-Jessie Hawkins oted thl te-Do th Reinhard The The The The The The The The The The The The The most n a e ro Y proudest member--Sue Greene prettiest girl-Mary Kelly wittiest in class-Helen Kerber . sweetest singer-Doris Kotschenreuther most friendly girl-Margaret Canning ef 1 K thl M n most grae u - a een ora most noted scientist-Virginia. Nierman poetess of the class-Marie Kin! best historian-Dorothy Reed best musician-Rosemary Flagg best C. S. M. C. member-Irene Ley . Father Daniel Lord, A. Tennyson Kathleen Norris 0. Henry Mary Hunt Jackson Faith Baldwin 4 K' asia Favorite Dish Color of Hair Creamed Potatoes and Corn Fritters Brown Spaghetti Brown Italian Spaghetti I Dark Brown Baked Ham Auburn Italian Spaghetti Italian Spaghetti Baked Ham Steak and French Fried Potatoes Fish Roast Pork and Potatoes Chicken and Wafiies S. J.Vegetab1e Soup Chili Con Carne Chicken Salad and Banana Cake Hot Dogs Spaghetti Swiss Steak Brown Light Brown Dark Brown Black Sandy Light Brown Dark Brown Dark Brown Red Dark Brqwn Sandy Dark Brown Light Brown ,.ft 1 .1 l ,f'1.u ii. - .QM e s. I v ,. , 114,11 eff, if f 1 ,f I f 'AA X , I .. ,i Af. w'i - irfivgff, ' Q 1 V- 7 Class Flower: Pink Rose 726 . 4, 4 gg. 4-'. Class Colors: Pink and Rose K I. 'V ! 4, r --V 1' 'gps -1 .y, V 4 ,Al f .M A ,-.,.. KJQ 1 I A x. 1 .1 1 l Q, ,utdilf -E 1 WU I KW :JP-.xx I Class Motto: lflxcelsior 1 N 3-'Vj L,,l.J'- j-gf' IPL 'l-fair-i'1l -x 1--fx XVI f Patricia Keight Anna Lee Martz Patricia Brett Margaret lluhrman Dorothy Schmidt Mary Meyers N i E l MW l 3 -.f9k.fl C-vig, J! i fd Betty Ziler Dorothy Wolfe Betty Harrison lcla Santora Jane Ackerman Rosemary Squillaee Pauline Klosterman , A Y it af lk Uf7S is Qing? il f A Q P A, 'fwy E ei r 1 I I '- 1 I, feta! - X-,ai .,L, 7. 1 4 f Kathleen Swami Mary Lourdes Grabenstein Laing Lawler 4 Jeanette Raphael Rosemary Mathias Dorothy Finn V ,Malay ,Q f.77'L-lf jA.frN.Xfr-52,4-o.! .4141 'K , 11-fJ'fN ' ,f-54,9 I Vi, ,MJ !f.,L,r.,...zff5L 4. Louise Singer Rose Marie Laing: Jane Porter Mary Louise Fair Alice Lookenoll, Mary Cecelia Murray Phyliss Umstol Q, 'V I ,X-i ' f i IJ fff' I V ' , I . ' - L I L ,L 77,1 Q, LUZLOTQ . . . ' l A Y Y f 441- I 5 1 5 'KIT' 7'f1LZu Cbrvrr-150. flu! ' hr.m,0 5 5 Class Colors: Maroon and Gold O12 Class Flower: Talisman Rose Phyliss Sell Jean McDonough Regina Nehring Helen Martz Jane Helmstetter Catherine Byrnes Rosemary McKenzie Mildred Flynn Eleanor Heyer Louise Lippold Virginia Foreman Kathleen Murray Agnes Keating Mary McDermott Mary Rossworm Dorothy Singer Louise Beaulieu Patricia Finn Mary Rice Mary Louise Mulligan mf' Class Motto: Do or Dare, Sink or Swim Anna Dressman Jane Ward Mary Theresa Narey Isabelle McIntosh Betty Gormer Helen Habig Louise Mattingly Doris Weber Kathryn Gerdeman Lydia Dawson Eileen Brennan ,I Betty Hartman ,V lfj 1 2 rf, ' fz f' I H 1 '1 .if 4 Y! fi ff , s x F Jean Geatz 6 Class Colors: Elue and Gold Class Flower: Salmon Rose I J. Alderton 5 Betty Bucholtz M. Brode S. Brode R. Becker E. Clark M. J. Clark A. Cooke F. Ferrato F. Gillard L. Glick A. Grabenstein C. Heinrich 1 S. Herboldsheiner 3 H. Kelly D. Kienhofer Mary Ann Mooney M. C. McIntyre B. McDonough M. Muir M. T. Neely H. Ruppenkamp E. Ruppenkamp M. J. Stein M. C. Schaaf J. E. Schaaf B. Taney M. E. Twigg R. Weisenmiller H. Young Class Motto: Non Scholae, Sed Vitae 1.51 of Baaut VEN the thought of a beautiful object is always sweet and pleasing. There never was a created thing possessed of the elements of beauty that was not of some use to some one. What a display of surpassing K . . . A beauty is brought out in the varying colors of a summer sunset! Every tint seems to reiiect to us a beautiful thought. All the red and gold and purple seem to heighten the more somber shades and make a picture that, once seen, is never forgotten. And is not this all of use to us? It cheers our spirits. It lifts our minds into regions of higher thought. We feel less inclined to think of the common, while the deeper propensities of our nature are wrought upon, and surely it is always useful to us to have our better and deeper feelings touched. The genuine pleasure that can be drawn from the source of beauty in nature is enough to compensate for half the trials and sorrows we have to bear. It it could be shown to us that our trials and sorrows spring from a source of beauty, We would feel reconciled toward them. Beauty does not exist solely in forms visible to the eye. If such were the case, what a sea of sorrow and blackness this world would be to the blind- they who never can behold the golden sun or penetrate the heaven at midnight, or unfold the secrets that lie hidden in a rose. Yes, nature possesses other beauties, which they, too, can share. And one is the beauty of sound. The song of a bird or the murmur of a brook says just as much to the sightless as to those who can see. And all the delicate odors that pervade green nature are just as attainable to them as to those who have sight. Beauty seems to carry with it a mute language. When we hold a beautiful rose in our hand, it seems as if we might read its thoughts and tell its feelings. The flow of a river, that very poetry of motion, is another thing that seems to have life and language owing to its beauty. B What a dismal place home would be if no beauty existed there, even the smallest cottage may be made attractive if adorned outside by pretty lawns and flower gardens, and if inside the walls are decorated with pretty pictures and the room filled with modest, tasty furniture, and best of all, if the faces of the occupants of the cottage are sunny and smiling, for a smile, wherever it is, is only a sudden fiash of beauty, that has indeed a use, when it is re- flected across the darkened sky of a troubled heart. The use of beauty in every home is manifest to all. From the humblest cot- tage to the grandest mansion, beauty is the soul of attraction. Beauty and love go hand in hand. Beauty creates love, and love is impossible without it. How could We love if there was nothing beautiful? Truth, simplicity and virtue are all deep-hidden beauty and without them and that crowning decoration, that part of beauty that is visible to the eye, nothing lovable is left. What a great use beauty is in the sick-room. The life-giving effect of the pretty flowers brings a Hush of healthful color to the wan, wasted cheek. The perfume and out-of-door air that is carried upon the dainty petals hasten the recovery of the invalid. It is often said that beauty dies with the fading spring and summer, and is wafted away like 'Summer evening's latest sigh that shuts the roses.' But she is indestructible, and lives and blooms again as bright and fair as ever. And though beauty were only a momentary spark, her passing light would still benefit us. When her iniiuence is once felt, it never can be erased, but will live on, deeply engraved in our hearts-the brightest star of our existence. QA 'rl-IE 1940 if 5'-I uRsuuNE cw, BV Sw. ,fx ' ' THE 1940 uRsul.lNE Ufzitlufa fo Jlflafzy, wz Queen flowers unshlne and warmth is our Blessed Mother s festaltide Mary s Aww long day of gladness and joy and peace and purity and holiness, Our fWN'N' lady's feast of rejoicing as the Mother of the King and our own dearest Mother, to whom We owe Our Lord's coming and with Him all her own great love. From the first day of May to the end of the fair month of brightness and life and freshness, the Church and all her children send up a song of praise and glory, of gratitude and love, to the Virgin Mother of Christ. And justly sog for Mary never fails us if we but place our trust in her. She is our friend, our advocate before the throne of high Heaven. She always lends a Willing ear to our petitions and always obtains an answer if, in the wisdom of God, our petitions are for the good of our immortal souls. And that is why, during May- time, saint and sinner, the fervent and the indifferent, all feel a new impulse of devotion. Reverend A. Ryan said that the reason above all why we honor Mary is simply this: Mary is the Mother of Jesus Christ, and Jesus Christ is God. Thus our love for her is only as a means of loving God. It does not rest or end in her. She is fairest of creatures-none mirroring the perfections of the Creator as she does-but still only a creature, only a wondrous reflection of the infinite beauty of God. She is bountiful, but only with what has been given to her, and if graces pour from her hands, it is because her Divine Son puts them there. She never took honor to herself. When Elizabeth praised her as Blessed among wornenj, at once she passed on the praise to God in her canticle Magnificat. We never pray to her to have mercy on us as we pray to God, but we beg her to pray for us that God may be moved to have mercy. Holy Mary, Mother of God, pray for us sinners. The young pray to her for purity, and she goes to her Son and begs the gift for them. The sinner cries out: Refuge of sinners, pray for me, and she throws herself at her Son's feet and implores Him to have mercy and forgive. We light candles at her altar, and we place beautiful flowers there, but our hearts are ever in the Tabernacle, where her Divine Son hides His majesty, and We ask Mary, His Mother, to make us less unworthy to kneel there before the face of Jesus. All our lives we shall pray to Mary, and we shall meditate on her beauty, and the holiness of her Song and when the hour of death comes may each Ursuline girl close her eyes in death in the sweet embrace of her dear Mother and Heavenly Queen, whom she has loved so tenderly during her life time. .HE fairest month to the fairest Queen--The month of May, month of fy, IHE 1940 uRsuLlNE aw C-Q, 51720 7,0118 Remember, O beautiful Mother, That none ever asked thee in vain To comfort, to cherish, to bless them, Or soothe their heart's desolate pain. O hear me, as humbly confiding In thee, my dear Mother, most blest, I place at thy feet my petitions, And ask thee for peace and for rest. In thy arms the pure Word Incarnate Did lovingly, trustingly, lie, While thy tender heart of a mother Was pierced by His tiniest cry. This remember, my Mother most holy And thy loving child let me be, Until in the radiant Heaven I dwell with thy Son and with thee. anis aw 6124 may Queen Cfafgzvzina gem 1012 Jlffazy, Dm Jmofgsz M ,O Mth,L kd sh Imslzimgugous .gay sfmczzzz diss S Yam dffandanf Virgin the purest, We give you our loveg Present it to Jesus in heaven above. 0 dearest of Mothers, We greet you today For you have been chosen Fair Queen of the day. ff 1 uRsuuNE TH:-: 194D AUX fuziufkna Gquxigazy MRS. VERGIL GREENE, MRS. FRANCIS HABIG, President Vice-President MRS. LOUIS W. LIPPOLD, MRS. NORMAN GEATZ, Treasurer Secretary THE 1940 URSULINE aw .!.Tw1f'E-1F 17 A' IHE 1940 A URSULINE Uwe! U0 U55 qlwufims uxificvzkcf There are many nice folks in this world of ours, Everywhere in this sun-bright land- But we're sure there are none that are half so kind, And we hope that you understand Just how much we appreciate all that you do To make school days happy and gay. Please accept the thanks and the grateful prayers That come straight from our hearts today! PROGRAM IN HONOR OF U52 flluufirze cquxifiafzy MAY 16, 1940 Tribute to Ursuline Auxiliary Tableau ..,............,..,. ,... H ome, Sweet Home Song i..........,... ,.., M other McCree Hail To The Queen Recitation .,...... .,..,.,..,...,,..,.,, M other's Day Monologue . . . .,.,, Aunt Sophia Visits The Veterans Song ...,.. ,.,,.....,.... G od Bless America Recitation .... . .When Mother Goes Away Play ..... ,,..,........, M other Dear Recitation . 4 4 ..,...,. In The Middle of The Night Song .,.. .... M other At Your Feet Is Kneeling Song .i.. .... T he Girl That Mother Used To Be Monologue . . . .....,.....,.. A Bumping and A Curving Song ,,........, . . Thanks Be To God For Mothers So Dear A Mother's Day ' A Pageant of Mother Love , Song ...,...................,........,........ ..,.... D ance of the Winds There is nothing in this world that lasts like a mother's loveg there is no iniiuence that holds us in its power more surely than the influence of the motherg there is no love on earth that gives so much and demands so little in return as mother love. THE 1940 LEO H. LEY, Sr. Dramatic Teacher and Director FRANCIS MEYERS, Assistant Director URSULINE 'zaif of M25 fonzaoma 936125 A Modern Dramatization In Three Acts CAST OF CHARACTERS June Tolliver ... Sal Tolliver .. Bub Tolliver ..ii Judd Tolliver .... Hannah Tolliver . Dave Tolliver . . . Loretta Tolliver . . Uncle Billy Beams Ole Hon ,........ Ellie May . . . Red Fox . . . Jack Hale ...... Anne Saunders .. Maw Falin ,.i.. Narrator ..,, . . . . . .Virginia Nierman .. .Jessie Hawkins . . . . .Sue Greene . John Murphy Irene Ley .Herman Grabenstein . . . . . .Jane Peddicord , . . .William Ward . . . . . . .Helen Kerber Margaret M. Canning . , ..... Earl Darber ...,....Leo Ley, Jr. .Mary Frances Kelly . .Agnes Helmstetter ................Kath1een Moran I . l r i Letitia Carberry, Tish Lizzie ...,,..,...... Aggie .,..AA... Ellen Leighton . , 4 Charita ,.....,... Luther Hopkins . . . Callie Hopkins . . . Charlie Sands . .4 Bettina Trent ,... Sheriff Lem Pike . . . Wesley Andrews 4 . . Denby Grimes . . . Dorice Gaylord . . E15 A Comedy In Three Acts CAST OF CHARACTERS Director-Leo H. Ley, Sr. . 4 . . 4 . .Helen Kerber , 4 . .Virginia Nierman 44......4...Irene Ley . . . ,Mary Frances Kelly Margaret Mary Canning ..4.....,.Edward Neus . 4 4 , . 4 .Rosemary Flagg . . .Herman Grabenstein . .Doris Kotschenreuther ........Leo H. Ley, Jr. . 4 . .William Ward .4 . . . 4 .Fred Graham . . . .Dorothy Reinhard Assistant Director-John King 4 0 CQ, THE 1940 C A URSULINE U cgwcarzs fiom qfyaigirzgfofz Qzogzam :Scans fiom fa'zfjzj cqfcfiamiitu Sfffv. THE 194-U A gl Zi URSULINE all? -1 . Q A-'15, ',:, ..:i--gp. THE 194-Cl K URSULINE , 'g Y glllb Emfufzing Qfafusfi What lessons hast thou learned in U. A's eventful school? The summit of the arch of life lies just ahead, Search now thy heart and mind. What values dost thou find? What truth remains that shall the shortened years now rule? The pomp, the show, the fevered quest for wealth and fame I clearly see are vain and empty myths which fail, And soon are dead and stale, Man's spirit naught avail, But off with evil greed the mind and soul inflame. I've learned to love God's handiwork-the sea, the sky, The setting sun which lights up waters calm and still, Then sinks beneath the hill. Such daily wonders thrill My soul in grateful praise to Him who reigns on high. I've learned to know the warmth and glow which friendship brings, The understanding look, the hand that meets my need, The kindly word and deed Which oft my spirit freed, And helped me raise my head when sore oppressed with things. I've learned to hold in sacred trust the tender love Which makes the ,home the richest gift on earth below- A safe retreat from woe, Where simple virtues grow, Where finite men foretaste that larger Home above. Full well I know we're here to give and not to get, To follow hard on Truth, to help uphold the Right, To grope toward fuller light Which now transcends our sight, To be content, to live each day and not to fret. QQQX THE 1940 F unsufm I ,4 , I, 5011612 Cyan The gay belles of fashion may boast of excelling In waltz or cotillion, at Whist or quadrilleg And seek admiration by vauntingly telling Of drawing and painting and musical skillg But give me the fair one, in country or city, Whose home and its duties are dear to her heart Who cheerfully sings some pretty song, While plying the needle with exquisite art: The bright little needle, the swift-Hying needle, The needle directed by beauty and artf' MRS WILLIAM B. MARTZ, Teacher omaific Science Cyan Cookery means the knowledge of Medes and Circe and of Helen and of the Queen of Sheba. It means the knowledge of all the herbs and fruits and balms and spices, and of all that is healing and sweet in fields and groves and savory in meats. It means care- fulness, inventiveness, and willingness and readiness of appliance. It means the economy of your grand- mothers and the science of the modern chemist, it means much testing and no wasting, it means English thoroughness and French art and Arabian hospitality and in fine it means that you are to be perfectly and always ladies. -Ruskin. MRS. F. W. KREMER, Teacher if' 0 vM dxAWwe-W-,Mn cc ccc i url! fH51c2f1'L some Weeel HIAI -,Av URSULINE l MISS LYDIA MILLMAN Physical Education Teacher THE 1940 URSULINE ?Sif V,. , w- IL 4 X allkx ' ill, E l it l URQULINE THE 1940 ' f a as 6 A smile, a song, and a cheer For dear old Ursuline's team, To us it is ever dear, The Ursuline team. We're a mighty throng, And we're proud to belong To the Ursuline team. MRS. LEO LEASURE Basketball Coach 4 W' avg f 7 15? Y I , , THE 1940 a uRsuLlNE I ,E G. 5512601 Ufazta CRJOOMY, 35555 K5lf6KfW5l7ZLLil2 In pensive thought I trace the years, Recount the struggles, doubts, and fears, The pains, the griefs, the sad mistakes That mortal man forever makes- THESE STILL REMAIN: The joy of work, that sense of pride In humble toil that seeks to guide The steps of youth their place to find In useful service to mankind. The love of books, that calm repose My wearied mind forever knows When I commune with bards of old, Attent to Wisdom they unfold. The strength of friends, that handclasp Outstretched to me in woe or weal, Which needs no Words to tell its tale Of loyal trust that ne'er shall stale. The light of home, that refuge safe Where daily cares no longer chafe, Where understanding love prevails And praise for mercies never fails. Whate'er the future may contain Of heights or depths, of joy or pain, Down through the corridors of time I shall proclaim that faith sublime- FSH. THESE STILL REMAIN. Ez fda .faflo 'UlfO'Zy THE HYDROGEN TWINS AND MR. OXYGEN Good day, said Mr. Oxygen, and how are you today? Please let me walk with you, if you should go my way, And I will take each by the hand and keep you safe with me. QVVhat happened to the twins of Hydrogen you soon shall see.D Each little one Hydrogen grabbed Oxygen's soft hand, But lo! Instead of three fair ones, a tiny drop did stand, One drop of water stood alone, forsaken as could be, No trace of Oxygen nor Hydrogen now could you see. Thus both had come together so, to form some H 20, To form a compound wholly new, yet surely all to know. VD xii, THE 1940 ' 'l 5 URSULINE , ,ni ,, ,. Yf -- A nl HI ? VVY- - 4 Q .fi igwz liaaiy Z 6416012 organ . NOTHER year has ended. Again Our Lady's Mission Workers have ,losed a successful mission year, because the missionary spirit instilled Wag, in us from former teachers never dies but ever increases in various C' Ways. Upon our entrance to Ursuline Academy as Freshmen each and every one of us becomes a member of Our Lady's Mission Workers, whose chief purpose is the support, both spiritual and material, of the workings of the mission. The term Missions is a vast one which embraces the whole World! There are Missions in the cultured lands of France, in the royal territory of England, and even in the democratic United States, among the old and the young, in all spheres of society, and everywhere there are souls to be saved! T During the past year Ursuline girls worked steadily with hearts full of love for Christ. Their small contributions and sacrifices wrapped with Charity and Good Will for the benefit of the missions must have been a stepping stone to success, perhaps bringing joy to a lonely home, or the light of Faith to some darkened soul. Each member of Our Lady's Mission Workers endeavored to do her best in order to make 1939-1940 a very successful one for the Missions. And the success of the year is attributed to the fact that Our Lady's Mission Workers were unified in the pursuit of one goalg that is: the support of the home and foreign Missions, both in a spiritual and material way, for the spread of Christianity! Jifiiaiion. cqcfiuitisa i 4 4' milk THE 1940 uRsuLlNE ?H Egl9 4 U W gg rgggg RS u LI N E QWQQA ofmiiiiorz Cllfozflszi in Cgsninrz iiiiorz Begg Mission bells are ringing, In happy, holy chime, A message sweetly bringing Of God's salvation time. Mission bells are calling To us from lands afar: Oh help us with your alms To go Where pagans areln THE 1940 uRsul.lNE ag X i 49 4 Qui Dzcgsafzca 5512601 Ubionz I i The sun that brief December day Rose cheerless over hills of gray, And, darkly circled, gave at noon A sadder light than waning moon. The wind blew east: we heard the roar Of ocean on his wintry shore, And felt the strong pulse throbbing there Beat with low rhythm our inland air. A e THE 1940 ' l' ' URSULINE na Qui gave 'Lita Jifionfga O Sacred Heart! be Thou our shield and stay, Be Thou our hope through all life's weary wayg Open for us Thy saving portals wide, O Sacred Heart of Jesus Crucified! HE month of June may well be termed. liturgically, the month of the Love of God. Even from the standpoint of nature, it is a season of 5,X,4,4,5 warmth, light and happinessg the month of sunshine of life, the month WX'X ' of graduationsg the month of ordinations. May, with its flowers and sweet memories, is consecrated to Our Blessed Ladyg June is dedicated to the Sacred Heart. From the earliest ages of the Church, the attributes of the mercy and love of God have had a special attraction for the faithful. Such a devotion as the one recommended to us in June brings with it, as one of its distinctive graces, a feeling of love in the human heart in return for the love Christ lavished on mankind. Christmas and Easter have their symbolisms, and in June we have still another, and that the sign of the suffering heart. After the feasts of the Nativity and the Redemption, we have the feast of the hunger and thirst of Christ for the hearts of men. What could be more Christlike than the gift of His own Heart? What could be more symbolic of the strength of love, its power and its reward? Our Lord had revealed the devotion of His Sacred Heart to Saint Margaret Mary some years before making known His desire that a special feast should be celebrated in Its honor. In 1648, the saintly Eudes-now Saint John Eudes- had succeeded in establishing in the diocese of Autun the feast of the Holy Name of Mary, but it was not until twenty-seven years later that the feast of the Heart of Jesus was revealed. These dates, as a learned Jesuit remarks, are not without importance. They enable us to understand the admirable Wisdom of Divine Providence in the manifestations of two objects infinitely dear to our piety. They teach us that it is through the Heart of this Mother of beautiful love that we shall have free and easy access to the loving Heart of her Son Jesus Christ. It was, in fact, on the feast of the Holy Heart of Mary that Saint Margaret Mary received that most signal favor known as the Great Revelation, and which prepared the way for the future establishment of the Feast of the Sacred Heart of Jesus. Let us ever bear in mind that love and reparation are the very essence of devotion to the Sacred Heart, and that it is through Mary that we shall go to Jesus. 4 0 cw, .f.l f THE 1940 URSULINE ff flflffio .mfg rm. ff Who finds delight in trees and brooks, Who seeks out Nature's quiet nooks, Who hails afresh each new-born sun, Who's well content when day is done- 'Tis he Who lives. Who wins the love of trusting hearts, Whose ordered life true faith imparts, Who gains his fellows' good esteem, Who seeks to be and not to seem- 'Tis he Who lives. Who holds in leash the sordid lust For selfish gain which turns to dust. VW1o follows hard the higher good Which leads to human brotherhood- 'Tis he who lives. Whose ev'ry Word and act rings true, Who nerves his being to pursue That high ideal-the Rule of Right Which far transcends the rule of might- 'Tis he who lives. . Who lends a hand, who thinks and works, Whom duty binds, who never shirks, Who knows he gets but as he gives- Such man it is who really lives. THE 194D URSULINE lin CJ., e'Q?vx THE 194 M N U URSULINE EXECUTIVE BOARD SS. PETER AND PAUL URSULINE ALUMNAE ASSOCIATION MRS. RICHARD F. M'MULLEN, MISS LUCILLE M. LEY President Vice-President Gm Gqfumni On Saturday, October 28, the annual State Convention of the International Federation of 'Catholic Alumnae was held at the Emerson Hotel, Baltimore. Sisters Agnes Marie and Leonita attended and the following mem- bers of the Alumnae Associa- tion: Mesdames George Garlitz, Thomas F. Moore, Wyand F. Doerner, Perry Ambrose, Wil- liam Keller, Thomas Heyer, Richard F. McMullen, and Miss Rosemary Noonan. Mrs. Wyand F. Doerner, rep- resenting the lVIaryland Chapter on the International Committee of the Girl Scouts of the I. F. C. A., gave a most interesting re- port on girl scouting. Mrs. Thomas F. Moore was appointed trustee to fill the vacancy due to the death of our beloved, deceased member, Mrs. John Mulcahy. In November a rummage sale was held for the benefit of the the result was gratifying. annual Thanksgiving Bazaarg Through the Alumnae and Mrs. Wyand F. Doerner, the Girl Scout Troops 9 and 19, were given a special course in cooking. Cooking utensils were also donated to the Domestic Science class of Ursuline Academy. A small donation was sent to the International Headquarters for the Xavier Free Publication MRS. THOMAS HEYER MISS ANN YOUNG Society and Circulating Library Treasurer Secretary for the Blind. At a special meeting it was decided to have a raffle for the benefit of Archbishop Curley's jubilee fund. The raffle was a huge success and we were pleased to hand to our dear pastor, Father Boniface, the proceeds. In keeping with Catholic Action a Study Club was organized. Many members attended and enyoyed our meetings and we hope when we resume in the fall the same spirit of enthuslasm will prevail. During the past year the angel of death plucked from our midst one of our youngest and sweetest members, Rosemary Soehner, '39, Her family has an assurance of heartful sympathy and remembrance in our prayers. May her soul rest in peace. F 9 cqfumnaa Uzigufa go Dm cbliaizsu In wonder all philosophy began, in wonder it ends, and admiration fills up the interspaceg but the first wonder is the offspring of ignorance, the last is the parent of adoration. Despite the tendency of the times away from it, the spirit of wonder need never die on earth. Out of darkness still comes the dawn, out of silence the hurry of great winds, from the soil the delicacy of Howers, from the acorn a giant of a tree, and from the sacred beauty of matrimony the miracle of a child as from the glory of blossoms the fruit. Truly indeed, the- spirit of wonder should never grow faint in the heart of man. f And yet thart is precisely what happens. Enjoying such blessings year after year, month after month, day after day, we are inclined to take them too much for granted, and to ferget what marvels they really are. Surely their annual, or even daily, accur- rence does not substract from their greatness. But, strangely enough, it does, breed- a lack of appreciation and of thanksgiving. If the Creator were to withhold from the world, just once, the coming of springtime, people would be heard complaining over the entire world. But because our good God is gracious enough not to interfere with the glory of His own creation, because He lets us have every year, without fail, the harmonizing music of the birds and the brooks and the Whispering trees as Well as the infinite variation of color, from the blue of the sky to the dark and hiding sweetness of the violet, because He blends the warmth of the sun with the fragrance of May and June and July, and does a hundred other things like it, the voice of Hman, whichwould be only too ready to complain, remains silent and forgets to offer thanks. And this brings us to our point. We Alumnae members, old and young, have enjoyed year in and year out a beauty of devotion on the part of the Ursuline Sisters which many of us do not sufficiently appreciate. And why? For the same reason that we fail to appreciate the other blessings of heaven. We take that service of these God4sent women for granted. We dofn't pause to think how much we have needed them in the past for ourselves and how much we are going to continue needing them for the spiritual -growth of our children. And so to the Sisters who have given unstintingly ocf their time'and energy to our school we extend our grateful appreciation. ' in I A 4 Z' Copa THE 194D URSULINE - - - .fjcgoof Jlfofai - - - SEPTEMBER 7. One hundred and eight students registered. 11. Senior Class held first class meeting. Elected oHicers. 12. Reverend Father Boniface addressed students. Instilled love for the Blessed Mother. 13. Our Lady's Mission Workers held meeting. Mission officers elected. 15. Reverend Valentine Long, O.F.M., author, radio lecturer and professor at St. Bonaventure College, Buffalo, addressed students. 22. Chemistry Class presents play, The Alchemist's Dream. 29. Assembly. Juniors presented program about Catholic Authors and Poets. OCTOBER 2. The Pepaurac makes its appearance. 4. Feast of St. Francis of Assisi. Free Day. 9. Local Conference of the C. S. M. C. La Salle High School. 12. Columbus Day. No books, no tests. Out of doors! Tramped through leaves. 14. Seniors hold Bake Sale. Congratulations on success. 21. Feast of St. Ursula. 23. First sewing lesson of the season. 26. The Most Reverend Archbishop, Michael J. Curley, D.D., Archbishop of Baltimore and Washington, visited Ursuline Academy and addressed the students. A day never to be forgotten. P 27. Subscription Drive, Baltimore Catholic Review. 30. HalloWe'en party sponsored by the Ursuline Auxiliary. there and typical hallowe'en gaiety, with our dear, good mothers present for the fun of the evening. 31. Basketball practice commenced. NOVEMBER 7. Executive Board Meeting, Catholic Girls' Central High School. 8-9. Junior Class present play, Here Comes Charlie. 12-18. Education Week, celebrated with programs, essays, debates, songs. 17. Reports distributed by Reverend Father Boniface. Urges study and co- operation with faculty. 20. Thanksgiving issue of school paper. 21. Our Lady's Mission Workers present The Sign and The Catholic Digest to the Cumberland Public Library for one year. 23. Thanksgiving vacation. 27. Juniors receive class rings. Great happiness for the Juniors. DECEMBER 2. Seniors hold rummage sale. 3. Freshmen invested in Blessed Virgin Sodality. 5. Stamp and Magazine Drives inaugurated by Our Lady's Mission Workers. 8. Free Day. Feast of the Immaculate Conception. 9. U. A's Crusader's Christmas gifts to the Missions-religions cards, book- marks, calendars, medals-hundreds and hundreds of them speed on the way to the missionaries, north, south, east and west. 12. The Western Maryland Local Conference of the C. S. M. C. held meeting in Frostburg. 19. Christmas program by the students in the assembly room. 20. All studying ceased, Christmas recess. A 24. Twelve Christmas baskets from Our Lady's Mission Workers give cheer to the poor. 25. Christmas Day. , 27. Highlight of Christmas holidays-Dance sponsored by Ursuline Aux- iliary. JANUARY 3. Christmas vacation ended. 7. Executive Board meeting held at Ursuline. 9. Ursuline host to the Local Conference. Louise Lippold spoke on My Personal Views of A Vocation to the Religious Life. 23-25. Mid-term examinations. FEBRUARY 2. Basketball Game--Ursuline vs. Girls' Central High School. 6. Bingo party sponsored by Ursuline Auxiliary. 7. Our Lady's Mission Workers present The Queen's Work and The Shield, to the Cumberland Public Library for one year. 13. Local Conference of the C. S. M. C. held at St. Mary's High School. 15. Cast selected for Senior Play, Tish. 16. Our Lady's Mission Workers present A Barrel of Fun, a modern mission play. 21. Sophomores present play, in honor of Washington's Birthday. 27. Basketball game-Ursuline vs. Girls' Central High School. 28. Ursuline Auxiliary give Washington Tea. MARCH 8. Our Lady's Mission Workers send hundreds and hundreds of medical supplies to the missions. 12. Local Conference of the C. S. M. C. held at Girl's Central High School. 18. Basketball game-Ursuline vs. Fort Hill. 14. Vocation Program sponsored by the Junior Class. Tableau of Vocations for girls. 17. St. Patrick Program given by Freshman Class. 19. Easter Vacation. 20. Caps and Gowns ordered. Vacation not far away. 25. Easter Dance. Sponsored by Ursuline Auxiliary. 28-29. Senior Class presents Tish, coached by Mr. Leo H. Ley, Sr. - APRIL' V 8. Reverend Mother Roberta, Supervisor of Ursuline Order, visited Ursuline and Sister M. Winifriede, Supervisor of Schools. 9. Ursuline Auxiliary Skating party at Armory. 10. Oratorical Contest at Carroll Hall. Virginia Nierman contestant from Ursuline. 11. Selected Invitations and Cards for Commencement. One step closer to Commencement. 12. Our Lady's Mission meeting. A modern mission play presented, namely, Aunt Fanny's Miracles. 15. May Queen announced. Miss Jessie Hawkins is honored May Queen. Miss Catherine Jackson first attendant and Miss Betty Harrison is second attendant to the Queen. 18. Annual Mission Day. Students received Holy Communion in a body for the missions. Luncheon at school. Games and various activities in the afternoon. MAY 1. Annual May procession and the crowning of Our Lady's Statue. 2. Ascension-Holiday! 3 Seniors go to Goldfine's Studio to have pictures taken for the annual year- book. 5. The Local Conference of the C. S. M. C. held its Spring Rally. Paladin jewels awarded to Margaret Luhrman, Jessie Hawkins, and Jane Peddi- cord. Irene Ley received Archbishop Curley Medal. 12. Forty Hours Devotion. 16. Students entertain Ursuline Auxiliary with a Mother's Day program. 30. Memorial Day. Free! 31. Feast of St. Angela Merici, foundress of the Ursuline Order. JUNE 2. Baccalaureate Sunday. Alumnae Communion Breakfast. Reverend Valen- tine Long, author, radio lecturer and professor at ,-St. Bonaventure College, addressed the Alumnae Members and Graduates. 3. Senior Prom. Sponsored by Ursuline Auxiliary. 4. Program to celebrate Reverend Father Boniface's Feast Day. 5. Annual Picnic at the beautiful Alverno Grounds. 6. Annual Yearbook makes its appearance. 7. Commencement. F r Qafmona Reverend Father Boniface Weckman, O. M. Cap. Reverend Father Elmer T. Fisher Confraternity of Christian Mothers Third Order of St. Francis Ursuline Auxiliary Blessed Virgin Sodality Gallitzen Veteran Crusade Unit Alpine Club Ursuline Academy Alumnae Association The Commercial Press L. Bernstein Furniture Company Princess Shop Queen City Paint and Glass Company Lazarus Company Kelly Tire Company Habeeb's Flower Shop McCrory Five and Ten Cent Store Savoy Bowling Alleys Lillian's Girls Shop Schwarzenbach and Sons Sowers Pet Shop Harvey's Jewelry Store Walsh-McCagh Goldfine's Studio The Darling Shop Hill's Toy Store Kaplons Young Men's Shop Burtons Men's Shop CRIB Mr. W. Wallace McKaig Miss Thekla D. Price J Mr. and Mrs. F. E. Nierman Mr. John Schwarzenbach Mrs. Loretta Miller Cassen Miss Esther Jackson Mr. and Mrs. John Jackson Mr. John P. Walters Mrs. M. A. Peddicord THE 1940 URSULINE 17-Dabzona, aonfinuzcf Mr. and Mrs. R. P. Shierman Mr. and Mrs. Patrick J. McGuire Mr. and Mrs. E. V. Coyle Mr. and Mrs. Richard G. DuVall Mrs. Katherine Hawkins Mr. and Mrs. John Muir Misses Mary and Irene Finan Mr. and Mrs. Thomas F. Conlon Mr. and Mrs. George Frye Mr. and Mrs. J. P. Kotschenreuther Miss Rose Schmutz Mr. and Mrs. Bernard V. McGreevy Mr. and Mrs. Carl Schmutz Mr. and Mrs. De Sales Glick Miss Eleanor Long Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Soehner Mr. and Mrs. Marcus Reinhard Mrs. M. L. Fesenmeier Mr. John R. King Mr. William Geatz Mr. Carl F. King Mr. and Mrs. Norman F. Geatz Mr. and Mrs. Louis Lippold Mr. and Mrs. G. H. Flagg Mrs. P. V. Firlie Mr. Carl L. Firlie Mrs. Leo H. Ley Mr. and Mrs. W. F. Kerber Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Moran Mrs. George L. Stegmaier Mr. and Mrs. H. B. Klosterman Mr. and Mrs. Louis Firlie Mr. Leo H. Ley, Jr. Professor Peter Schumacher Mrs. Rose E. Sanford Misses Madeline and Regina Wallace Mr. and Mrs. Joseph K. Mooney Mr. John J. Ward, Jr. Mr. J. S. Whittington THE 1940 URSULINH 3. .g C aw, lllllllIIIIIllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlllllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllIIIIIIIIIIIllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllllllllllllllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlllllllllllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllIIIIllllllllllllllllllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllllllllIIIIIIIIllllllllllllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIllllllllIIIIIIIIllllllllIIlIIIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllIIlllll C70 gilt, graduates What are your plans for September, 1940? Why not prepare for a Business Career? Think of your future! EN ROLL IN U55 Qlfcsufina usim-:ss Ssafioof Cumbe'rland's Business School for Girls OUR AIM To put Business Theory into Business Practice. To emphasize personal RESPONSIBILITY and RELIABILITY as essential qualities to a Business Student. To counteract present-day attitude of PRETENSE by instilling EARNESTNESS into Study and Practice. To prove that SUCCESS comes only from HONEST EFFORT. -OUR OFFER One Year Secretarial Course: . Stenography, Typewriting, Filing, Business Spelling, English, Arithmetic, Bookkeeping, Mimeograph and Mimeoscope Art. General Secretarial Training. OUR TERM September to June-Daily Class Hours: 8:30 A. M., to 3 P. M., Except Saturday. Intermission 12:00 to 1:00. OUR RATES 810.00 per month. No deduction for part time. First payment to be made with S Registration. Monthly payments thereafter. Reservations by Phone, Mail, or Call, between August 26 and 31. REGULAR ATTENDANCE REQUIRED REGISTRATION-September 5 and 6 CLASSES OPEN-September 9. NO ENROLLMENT LATER--PART TIME STUDENTS NOT ADMITTED. IIIIIIIIIIIIIlllllllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllllllIIIlIIIlIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIlIIIIIlllllllllll1llllIllHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII IIIIIIIIINllllllllllllllllllllll IIIIIIIHlIlHl1Il!IVHHllHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllIIllIIllIIIllllllllllllllllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIlIIIIIIllllllllllllllllllllllll THE 1940 URSULINE edgy? WW Gqfzfzfzsaiafiolz E, the Senior Class of 1940, wish to acknowledge with sincerest appreciation all the aid that has been rendered us in the publica- of this book. No expression of gratitude can adequately thank our kind and many benefactors. We are deeply grateful to our patrons who have helped to make our yearbook a success. May God bless each and everyone. Slxlifxff tion Z F Q . L k If ,.,, ., , Q. , ,' ,J .. 1.1. '55, .4 ',..,LQf15L1T -r -F, g .1 '. Q 1 A ., -- ,, ry I-1 ' ' I , ' , V' , f ' ,' . 'n.. ' , 1 ' i V Y X I ix. 6 5 3 , . ' ' xxx 1 'g f 1 , .0 , , ' J ' J, : L' , if 5 ' L, k, . ,I ,.- ' L if , .V Q , . 3 -A ., RV , in ...Q ' r -.4 .-' fn, . YV k 22.4 X' ' ff? uf -- ' , - fr ' 7 f .an A ' .. h A I 1' Q , . 5, if A W ' .5 M. 11, 'T .- 1' , if , M, ' , '- .: , C 1-11 W P f ,rn L f' ' x ' :4 A ' ' a . V - 4 'nl I 5 1 . ..'. ' fx, f .5 . 'i 1, . Q vf' ' ' Ii, , V -r -f,,. f' . ...- ui., W VZ?-Tia' 5, ' A N tx 4 Q v -J' f' i? , I, 4- 4 . 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