Peterborough Collegiate and Vocational School - Echoes Yearbook (Peterborough, Ontario Canada)

 - Class of 1940

Page 22 of 108

 

Peterborough Collegiate and Vocational School - Echoes Yearbook (Peterborough, Ontario Canada) online collection, 1940 Edition, Page 22 of 108
Page 22 of 108



Peterborough Collegiate and Vocational School - Echoes Yearbook (Peterborough, Ontario Canada) online collection, 1940 Edition, Page 21
Previous Page

Peterborough Collegiate and Vocational School - Echoes Yearbook (Peterborough, Ontario Canada) online collection, 1940 Edition, Page 23
Next Page

Search for Classmates, Friends, and Family in one
of the Largest Collections of Online Yearbooks!



Your membership with e-Yearbook.com provides these benefits:
  • Instant access to millions of yearbook pictures
  • High-resolution, full color images available online
  • Search, browse, read, and print yearbook pages
  • View college, high school, and military yearbooks
  • Browse our digital annual library spanning centuries
  • Support the schools in our program by subscribing
  • Privacy, as we do not track users or sell information

Page 22 text:

EDITORIALS Certain of Sword and Pen Stand to your zrork and be zrisc. Certain of .szrord and pen, llvflfl uri' IIt'ffll0T C'flflIlI't'II nm' gods, But men. in rz world of men. How many times, in Morning Assembly, have we read these beautiful lines above th e proscenium arch and paid little attention to them? But now in wartime these words of Rudyard Kipling take on a deeper significance for each of us. We may think there is little we can do to help our country because we are at school, but it is because we are at school that we are important. Stand to your work and be wise may well be interpreted carry on your school work and your other activities to the best of your ability. Carry on should be our motto, for is that not what every Canadian did in the last war. Everyone of us should do his best, his very best, that he may be well equipped to do his part, tirst in winning the present conflict, and later in helping restore the world to normal conditions. Of course there are practical things that the students of P.C.V.S. can do to help win this war. Red Cross work is especially important. Many a girl in P.C.I. has already turned the heel on numerous pairs of socks. Many others have knit sleeveless sweaters, and fingerless mitts for the Air Force. Even a beginner can do her part and start knitting wristlets. The work of the students is greatly appreciated at the Red Cross Rooms in the Public Library, but there are always more socks to be knit, more dressings to be made, more boxes to be packed. If more students would give their time the Red Cross would be assisted and we would be doing our bit even though still at school. Whether we know anyone who is on active service or not, we can always pack boxes to bring comfort and pleasure to our men. We can always save old magazines for our sailors in Halifax who are waiting for their ships to be convoyed or perhaps to act as convoys. A very little effort on our part may bring pleasure and relaxation to men anxious and weary. We should all buy British products. Let us get into the habit of making certain that our purchase is from some part of the British Em- pire. Let the shopkeepers know that British products are preferred. This is important. By buying British we may do our bit to keep British factories busy and British funds in circulation. Page Fourteen When war has broken out there is only one thing to do-win it. But of what use is winning it if every succeeding generation must exhaust itself in the same way? It will be up to our generation to find a lasting peace. To accom- plish this we must start thinking now of the future. We should' study closely the peace treaties of the past to see where they succeeded and why they failed. Then we must go on and make a peace that will truly end war for all time. With this thought in mind let each of us read Kipling's words again, feeling the deeper mean- ing and vow that we shall, in truth, Hstand to our work and be wise . B.aRB.A.1u SCOTT Acknowledgments This year enthusiasm for The Echoes reached a new peak, due partly to the winning of The Sigma Phi Trophy. This interest made the work of preparing The Echoes easier than usual. We should like to thank Dr. Kenner and the teaching staff for their kind interest and co- operation. We should also like to thank the student body as a whole, but especially those who con- tributed to the literary, art, and photography contests. We offer our sincere thanks to the judges of these contests: Mr. Hale, Miss Park, Miss McBride, Miss Thompson, Mr. Browne, and Mr. Henry. The Art Staff is specially deserving of men- tion. They worked very hard and in a very short time accomplished a great deal. The members of the Advisory Board have given much of their time and energy to The Echoes. Those mentioned above acted as judges in our contests, and the others have done no less in their own sphere. Mr. Toole, the Business Supervisor, has always been very encouraging and has helped us try out new ideas as we wanted to do. Thanks to Miss Lees, Mr. Shearer, and the advertising staff we are able to publish as large a magazine as in former years. To Miss Mc- Gregor who is in charge of printing, we offer a special vote of thanks for all she has done for The Echoes in making it the magazine it is today. BARBARA Scori-

Page 23 text:

John Buchan, Lord Tweedsmuir, 1875-1940 On the day Lord Tweedsmuir, Governor- General of Canada, visited our city in 1938. we students were present to be inspired by his chaste oratoryg and then there was added to that idolatry we had for him as an author, the respect, felt rather than worded, that people reserve for the supreme forms of greatness. There is around all great men, as he himself has told in writing of Montrose, an aura of excel- lence which is like the air of consecration men attach to vessels: with the difference that this light of a great man comes always from within, being no false splendour wrought in the minds of his worshippers. No man is appreciated until he is dead, and after his death his own generation overpraises him. It remains for posterity to find the true judgment. Yet Lord Tweedsmuir cannot suffer with time, for the honour we bear him is simply this: that he was a Christian gentleman consecrated to duty and achievement, that he distinguished himself in far-Hung spheres of activity, and that so much did he influence those who lived around him in the World. that his memory shall not perish among their descendants. He is known to millions as John Buchan, and it is as John Buchan that he will be remember- ed. He knew great men intimately, of the past as well as of his own times. Scott he loved, Cromwell he honoured, Augustus he praised, Montrose he revered, to the writing of their lives he brought that spark of genius that burned within himself, and those biographies will stand while the men that inspired them are remembered. Always he wrote of heroes, he never alto- gether relaxed a weary mind, but turned it instead to other work: to writing. And the heroes he dreamed to himself, Dick Hannay. Ned Leithen, Dickson McCunn, and most of all per- haps old Peter Pienaar, display themselves not in heroics but in heroism, for he knew in his soul the essence of the hero, that he do great deeds with naturalness. His fifty novels gladden the plain man as much as his dozen biographies attract the scholar, and the scholar himself turns to them for relaxation. No man probably in modern letters has so delighted such hosts of readers, or has done them as little harm. A great num- ber of his novels will in time perish, but not in our time, and a tithe of them will remain to be his memorial. The writing, by which he touched the people around him most, was but one of many activities. He was private secretary to Lord Milner in South Africa, during the trying days that followed the Boer War. In the British Navy, he was a member of the Headquarters Staff, and Director of Information. He served 5 His Excellency at Peterborough, May, as Lord High Commissioner to the Church of Scotland in 1933 and 1934. a position once occupied by our present King. During much of this time he was active partner in Nelson's Publishing House: he wrote, read, planned. edited, and invested continually. His was a strenuous life spent moving in high placesg yet he was himself the son of a lowly Scottish manse. In the year that he be- came Governor-General, he was created Baron Tweedsmuir of Eltield: yet it is more true to say that he wasuborn great than that he had greatness thrust upon him. The ultimate springs of nobility he probed in The Path of the King- We tell ourselves that Shakespeare was the son of a wool-peddler, Napoleon of a farm- er, and Luther of a peasant, and hold up our hands at the marvel. But who knows what kings and prophets they had in their ancestry! There is reserved for him an epitaph taken from a book that he loved, and applied by him to that one of his fiction heroes whom perhaps he honoured most highly, it tells of the passing of Mr. Valiant-for-Truth. fContinued on Nerf Pagej Page Fifteen if' 1938

Suggestions in the Peterborough Collegiate and Vocational School - Echoes Yearbook (Peterborough, Ontario Canada) collection:

Peterborough Collegiate and Vocational School - Echoes Yearbook (Peterborough, Ontario Canada) online collection, 1935 Edition, Page 1

1935

Peterborough Collegiate and Vocational School - Echoes Yearbook (Peterborough, Ontario Canada) online collection, 1936 Edition, Page 1

1936

Peterborough Collegiate and Vocational School - Echoes Yearbook (Peterborough, Ontario Canada) online collection, 1937 Edition, Page 1

1937

Peterborough Collegiate and Vocational School - Echoes Yearbook (Peterborough, Ontario Canada) online collection, 1938 Edition, Page 1

1938

Peterborough Collegiate and Vocational School - Echoes Yearbook (Peterborough, Ontario Canada) online collection, 1941 Edition, Page 1

1941

Peterborough Collegiate and Vocational School - Echoes Yearbook (Peterborough, Ontario Canada) online collection, 1940 Edition, Page 102

1940, pg 102

1985 Edition online 1970 Edition online 1972 Edition online 1965 Edition online 1983 Edition online 1983 Edition online
FIND FRIENDS AND CLASMATES GENEALOGY ARCHIVE REUNION PLANNING
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today! Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly! Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.