Pickering College - Voyageur Yearbook (Newmarket, Ontario Canada)
- Class of 1940
Page 1 of 76
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 76 of the 1940 volume:
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JH? fv J 1 w fi, 'Nl a 'I 'J' galil' ' Y .1 .,f, u X' n.'r1': ffw: A En i , 1 1 qi I X G' ' I ,',v x'.,'I ' fvw s f 9f1 ' I w1 z THE VOYAGEUR OANADA'S FINEST SPORTING GOODS SI-IOP! The home of over thirty sports-that's Simpson's new sport- ing goods shop on the fourth floor-and already sportsmen are agreeing that it's the finest in Canada! In this admirably lighted department, it's a real pleasure to choose your sporting equipment. Men Who are thoroughly famil- iar with every sport will see that you get the right equipment to make your pastimes even more enjoyable. The merchandise selections are, of course, the important thing. And no effort has been spared to round out a complete line-up of the last word in sporting equipment for the golfer, the tennis- player, the camper, the dog lover, the bicycle enthusiast. Q o Fourth Floor THE VOYACEUR lil l l0l010i0l0i 10l010i01 l0l0I0i0i010l0i0l0l0Q i QUIK TRI ITY COLLEGE IN THE UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO Trinity College, federated with the University, is one of the Art Colleges of the University and includes: A Faculty of Arts providing instruction for students in classes of limited size in all subjects taught by the Colleges. The full advantages of Federation with the University, instruction by its professors, qualification for its scholarships and degrees, with its Library, Laboratories and Athletic facilities and membership in Hart House. A Faculty of Divinity in which Trinity exercises its University powers of conferring degrees and prepares candidates for the ministry of the Church. Residences under college regulations for men-Trinity House, and for the women students-St. Hilda'sg also for members of the academic staff. The new residence for women students, known as St. Hilda's, was opened in September, 1938. The scholarships offered by the College have recently been revised and largely increased. Full particulars will be supplied on request. For information concerning Scholarships, Exhibitions, Bursaries, etc., Address: The Re-gistrar, TRINITY COLLEGE, Toronto 5. OQ i0i0Q0i0Hifi!!l0i0l0i010l0l0i0l0i0l0l0l0l0l0Q0i Q HOD .., 'Lu , l ' , E Clausen 5 Ulinnhersitp K1NGsToN oNTAR1o all J Incorporated by Royal Charter 1841 Situated in the oldest city in Ontario, 30 modern buildings, annual registration about 4,7005 health insurance provided during session, placement office helps students to find summer work and graduates to get jobs. ARTS-Courses leading to the degrees of B.A., M..A., B.Com., M.Com. Part of the work may be done by Summer School and correspondence. SCIENCE-Courses leading to the degrees of B.Sc. and M.Sc. in Chem- istry, Mineralogy and Geology, Physics and in Mining, Chemical, Civil, Mechanical and Electrical Engineering. MEDICINE-Courses leading to the degrees of M.D., C.M. and M.Sc., and the Diploma of Public Health. Matriculation Pamphlet, sent on request, includes complete list of scholarships and prizes awarded on entrance and on University work. Write for a Copy of QUEENS IN PICTURES 2 THE VOYACEUR 0l 010K0l Mnihersitp nf western Gntarin LONDON, CANADA It is certain that at the close of the conflict between. the Allies and Germany, which began on September 3r'd, 1939, there will be an over- whelming demand for scientifically educated men and women. Thous- ands of trained men in a wide range of professional categories will be required for reconstruction purposes. 1. - General Courses in Arts. 2. Course in Secretarial Science fB.A.J. 3. Course with Theological Options fB.A.J. 4. Course in Nursing QB.Sc.J. 5. Honour Courses in Arts fincluding Business Administration, Secre- tarial Science and Business Administrationl. 6. Combination course in Arts and Medicine CB.A., M.D.J. 7 Medical Course: six years after Honour Matriculation in English, Mathematics, Physics and French. 8. Public Health Course Q1 year! for graduate nurses and for physicians. For announcements and information concerning scholarships, matriculation, courses of study, etc., write: K. P. R. NEVILLE, PH.D., REGISTRAR, pioioioioioioioioioioioioioioioioioioioioi 1 101 3 10101 DIX N,S. MCMASTER Y 0l0l0l0QOQ0l0l0iC!QC .00 b:QlQ0l0l0l0i0l0i0l0i0l0l0Q0i- i I i ! UNIVERSITY Pencils, Crayons, Erasers and Q ' HAMILTON, ONTARIO Penholders ' 9 . Courses in ELDORADO - The Master g I Drawing Pencil- i i AR TS and SCIENCES HSOVEREICNH - The Business i ! Leading to PGHCII- i ! B.A., B.Sc., M.A., B.D. degrees CHANC.ELLOR -Canada's Fav- i ! Excellent preparation for Oflte 5C PGUCII- i ! Law, Finance, Industry, Com- M d f C d- h-t merce, Journalism, Civil Service, a e rom ana lan grap 1 e i ! Teaching, Library Work, Social ffTH1N1rjXv-C010red pencils. i ! Service, the Ministry. Dixon Canadian Made Pencils are on Sale i ! The University Ongers by Leading Stationers i Matriculation Scholarships of i value from S610 to 55660. DIXOH PCIICII Co., i i For calendar and cinformatioen , S apply to MJWMARKET - - ONTARIO i I The Registrar D I I O 0Q0l0iOl0Q4O:4l WH l0l0l0l0l0l0l0l01 l l0Q 3 THE VOYACEUR . lli1iillll0i0l0l0l0l0l0i11lllilil DAVIS LEATHER CCD. LIMITED The Largest Tanners of Calfskins in the British Empire 0 NEWMARKET ONTARIO Lithographing Printing Bookbinding Envelope Making also Selling Agents for Sani-Tread Slippers used in Clubs throughout Canada. -I' DAVIS SL HENDERSON Limited 0l0l0l0l010l0i0i0l l ifllillflllil Q01 l0i010l0l0iOQ0-OQOQC 4 Q0lOl0l0l0l0Q0l0l0i ill 101 101 C0l Q i THE VOYAGEUR 0l0l0i10l0l0l0li0l0li0KClllll0llliilK0 .ffiL251i if-. 1' BEST :-'rn g'F4'l,.f ROGERS - con SDK? With the Compliments of The ELIAS ROGERS Company ALFRED ROGERS, President Limited 357 BAY STREET TORONTO, ONT ONE TON MEANS 2000 POUNDS 0l0l0Q0l0l0l0i ill l0l0QOQOQ0i0i il i l Q0l 1 Compliments of The Makers of the Complete Line FILING SYSTEMS and OFFICE EQUIPMENT FFICE SPECIALTYMFGEJ. LIMITED Head Office and Factories: Newmarket, Ont. l0QOQ0 i0 i0l0l0liDlKJi0liJl0lOlOl 10 5 l0l0l0i0l0QOQOQ i QOi0i0l l l0Q0i0l0QOl0Q0l0QOQ0 THE VOYAGEUR I. F. M. STEWART Sv. CO., LIMITED E.9talbli.911 ed 1922 O Dealers in Government, Municipal and Corporation bonds and shares in all industrial and mining companies. 0 ROYAL BANK BLDG. - TORONTO ELgin 8333 1010i 1 lOl HOD l010l0l010l0l 1 QOQ Q QOQ Q01 iliifh Q 10l0l0i i l 1 l0l0l0l0l0l0l0lOl0l0l0l0l0COQ WITH THE COMPLIMENTS AND GOOD WISHES OF Imperial Bank of Canada NEWMARKET BRANCH Q i i i i 'Q .4 010i 10 F m H 2 U2 O Z 3 UP Z :P C3 E11 E PU 6 THE VOYAGEUR lQOQ 0l010Q0l010Q1lQlJl 1 Q 1 l l lOl il lOl i0i0 It talces ABILITY to earn money ---CHARACTER to save Tragic are the ufailuresv who lack the character to save the money their ability enabled them to earn. Happiness and success are built on a sound financial basis and there is no surer start on the road to financial security than a Savings Account. It is one of the secrets of success. Now, while you are at college, follow a plan of regular saving. This Bank will gladly help you and it also provides absolute se- curity for your funds. THE DOMI IO AN Q Established 1871 ROBERT RAE--GENERAL MANAGER Each Issue of THE GLOBE 81 MAIL Is Your Daily Installment of World History For Reliable News From Far and Near Read i1wx4m:120mWZ2M:z2z1smQz2112:'- .v'14- U G V-f.::1wm-,wwfyfff ffa, ,,,., .... , , , ' ll N 1' Q 'X' K x ? oe Q QU11fi5lu.bt2a inh THE WILLIAM H. WRIGHT BUILDING ' ' ' ' ' I ' V ' I ts' Home of The Globe and Mall Canaclais National Newspaper i0l0l0l0i0liJl l 1 1 1 l 1 l0l0l0i0l 1 '7 I 0i0l010Q01 l0i0l0l0i0lOl0l l i i i il 0l0i0l0l0lO10l0l0Q0l0l l l Q i i i0l0l010i0l0l l l 1 l i0l010l0l0l01 1 THE VOYAGEUR Q0l0l 101 1 1 l l l0l0l0l0i'0l0i0i l Q Q01 l lOl Q Q Q l With the Compliments of Creed's Storage Vaults t d TORONTO WILLARD HQMPSC Real Estate RENTALS - SALES PROPERTY MANAGEMENT CAREFUL ATTENTION TO ALL INQUIRIES 115 INGLEWOOD DR., TORONTO MOHAWK 5850 l l i0i0l0l0l0l0l l 1 l lOl' i0Tllll1llilliQi0Q 8 lziliilllililillliill C0n1plz'nz0nf.w of the Miller Lithographic co. Ltd. 605 ADELAIDE ST. WEST, TORONTO ytQll0i l 1 1 l ll l lil ltbi 7l0l0l0lOQ0i0i0l010l0l0l0 THE VOYAGEUR sioi-oiOio1o1oio1O1oioio1o1c0zo Iazoxioioini 1 iniogoioioioioi ' l E Q f--- NX 7 9 Q u l C ...i I-I S ! ORDER DEPT. I PROMPI FOR GOOD i ! Elrgin WWMENT HAMS - BACON Q 9444-5-6 as if Afgliggo SAUSAGE - WEINERS i J l.EPHONE LARD and SHORTENING i i Q eff- T Q James Bamford8zSons : ' . . g 5 Limited ,P 44 i Q FRUIT AND VEGETABLE 5 Q DISTRIBUTORS j ! WHOLESALE FRUIT Q ! MARKET WHYTE PACKING CO. Ltd. Q TORONTO, ONT. 78-80 Front St. E. TORONTO SCHQQLS, HQSPITALS AND Q i HOTELS SUPPLIED G Youth Requires Perfecf Res! Assured on a Marshall M atiress THE MARSHALL VENTILATED MATTRESS C0. Division Of L. A. YOUNG INDUSTRIES OF CANADA, LIMITED ifll0lOl0l0l0l0l0i0iUl0l0l l iii 9 l0l0i0l0i0l0l0l i l 1 i0lO10 Qfli l THE VOYAGEUR Qfllll 1 iii 1 l l 1 llillllfllfll Charter a Coach Olfllfil l 1 i i l i i0l0QOQ s for Your Next Outing GO WHERE YOU PLEASE WHEN YOU PLEASE N0 RUSHING - NO WAITING For attractive rates telephone Gray Coach Lines Yonge at Front ADelaide 4221 Bay at Dundas l0l0i0l0l l l l0l0l0i0QOQOQ - oioioioioioioimi inicbze IP .I 1' 1' i I I I I I I I 9 I I I - I 9 I I I I 9 I I l 9 I I I 0 3 I I I O I I I I 9 I I I 9 I I I I o I I I I o I FINE FURNITURE FABRICS - RUGS INTERIOR DECORATION O I I I I I I I I I 9 I I I I I I I RIDPAH-rs 5 Limited 936 YONGE ST. TORONTO g i I I O I I I I Q I I I I I I I 10l0i0l0l01OlKll4Ji010l0lKDllO:Q, I Class Pins School Rings Trophies Dance avours A- IVIeciaIs anci Prizes Presentations eo: Write for our Booklets on uIVIecIaIs, Cups and Shields College and School Insignian GOD BIIQKS-ELLIS-PXRIE ommono MERCHANIS AND SILVERSMHHS Yonge and Temperance Streetsu-Toronto THE VOYACEUR D n1o1n1c E' 'rgoioi 10301030 133131 1 ! i ff E Forsey Page I 3 i DRUGS SL i Q I If you Want the best in qual- I I ity as vyell as service make it i a practlce to always shop at i I your nearest -x- Q g I C I A R C H I T E C T S I I G Q I 'I' Q , g Q DRUG STORE C I 20 St. Clair Avenue West TORONTO oNTAR1o i -will really enjoy i ' shopping there. O 0Q0,0l0l0l0Q0i0,C7QlO:Q. 0:0 DQOi0l0l0i0l010l0i0l i Q0l0l0l0l 0Q0l0Q0l J. O. LITTLE OUR SPECIALTY SCRANTON SCREENED COAL SEMET SOLVAY COKE WOOD in Phone-s Office 302 -Residence 408 lJQ0l0l0l0l0 ll l0l0l0iOi0l0l 1 lOl l0i0Q itll! i0l0l0i0l0l0 l0l0l0l0i0 i0 THE VOYACEUR i0i010l0i0i0l0l0i0iOl010i0 LANGMUIR PAINT COMPANY LIMITED -I- Manufacturers of PAINTS VARNISHES 8z ENAMELS - -1- OAKVILLE - ONTARIO l0l0l0l0i0l l0l0i0l0Q0i0QCO:Q DID YOU SAY FLOWERS? -P -if Just Call Violet Jflntner bbnp 17 St. Clair Ave. VV. HY. 5585 463 Eglinton Ave. W. Forest Hill Village HY. 6945 l0ll'l0i0l4ll0i0'l0i0ii!i li0QlO:O 9:9 la Y 9,0 PIO llOl0l0i01010l0Q0i0l0l'JQ CC CLASS PINS OF DISTINCTION CUPS MEDALS SHIELDS PRIZES Designers of Pickering College Pins I O A. E. EDWARDS 90 Gerrard Street West ELGIN 3669 .SQ li! l0l4DllbQ4ll1!l Q UIODQOIOQOIOKOQ George MacDonald and Company 129 Adelaide St. W. TORONTO A complete service embracing every branch of fine print- ing, embossing and office supplies Ji0l0i0l0l0l0i0Q0.0i0Q0i0Q1 0l0l0l0l0l0 THE VOYAGEUR Parkes lVlcVittie 8: Shaw Limited O INSURANCE Confederation Life Building TORONTO, ONT. 4 Richmond St. East Telephone-ELgin 8191 7Q0Q0i0Q0l0l0l0l iii i ifilf Get more of LIFE'S GOOD THINGS through the help of CUSTOM-TAILORED CLOTHES 'l' Here each person is studied as an individual .... with individual characteristics. Clothes modeled to emphasize certain features and to play down others. 835.00-up SKITCH CLOTHES -1- H.ARRY SKITCH-TLfD0R HIXRRIES -XVILF SKITCH 9 Adelaide St. East.-ELgin 4763 TORONTO Oifiiiillil If 0:0 b:OlQ0l0l0l0l0i0i0l0l LARWAY, TEMPLE 8: COOPER LTD. Specializing in SKIS - GUNS FISHING TACKLE Evinrude 8z Elto Outboard Motors SALES-SERVICE-RENTALS -l' Complete repair department for all sports equipment -l' 45 Adelaide Street East, Toronto, Canada O:0. ozo 3i0lOl0l0i0l0l0llJl0l0l0 10Q1 0:0 010101010101 l0Q l0l0i i0l0I0 Costumes on hand for all Gilbert 8: Sullivan Qperas 'I' MALLABAR COSTUME Montreal -l- TORONTO Winnipeg l!LllLl0l0i ilblthldzd ggoloioiojojqjoigi ioigioiolq THE VOYAGEUR 0l0l0lK7l M M i0l0l0l1.:. 'O:OlQ0i0l M M Q M MOQ Q QODO Perrin's Flower Shop 118 MAIN STREET Floral arrangements for all occasions Flozcers Telegraphed to all parts of the Worlfl Bonded Member of the Florists' Telegraph Delivery Association Phone 135-W NEWMARKET MOM M MOQOQOQOMOMOM M MOQG Com plimentsx of THE STRAND THEATRE NEWMARKET -I' AIways a good show OIG, y:. Ol M0101 i0i0l0i0QOQl K7l Q 1fll0l0i0lf!l'D 0lfDQ1TQ0l AC KROYD'S IMPERI L SERVICE HURON AND MAIN STS. N E W M A R K E T WHEREVER YOU GO .... YOU'LL ENJOY SMOOTHER PERFORMANCE WVITH ESSO EXTRA OR 3 STAR GASOLINES WASHING LUBRICATION YOU'LL LIKE OUR SERVICE DQOi'0l0l0l0QOQ010l ilidil l0l0l0l M M Q01 Q THE VOYAGEUR 0l0l0l0l i i0l0l0lC Eves SL Duncan G leaning and Tressing FOR FAST AND EFFICIENT SERVICE CALL or PHONE 419 CORNER MAIN and WATER STS. NEWMARKET OI0i0i0Q0l0l0l0l0l l ill i i Q 1 10101 0l0QOQOQOQf3l0l0QOQ0l1 ,IO DRUGS Drug Sundries City Dairy Ice Cream and Soda Fountain Piescriptions Sick Room Supplies Kodalfs and Films Nyal Agency C.P.R. Ticket Agency W. I. Patterson, Phm.B. Newmarket Phone 6 PQOQOQ0l0i0i0i42Q0i0lOi0i0l40:Q, 9 'U.ODi0 THE PICKERIN G COLLEGE HQLIBICZI' Cl'8CI4CI'u The Schoo1's Newspaper is printed by THE EXPRESS-HERALD Printing and Publishing C0 NEWMARKET -X- Printers and Publishers Since 1895 O O40 !llJl0l0l4Jl0l0l011Jll it i -101 li0Q1 i0llllilllQOQ0 JOSEPH MCCULLEY, B.A Headmaster THE VOYAGEUR A Personal Word T the moment these words are written, the very shape and form of the world which we have known is changing so rapidly that any attempt to describe what is happening might very well sound like ancient history by the time it appears in print. The events of the past few weeks have been such as to tear men's souls and to destroy their confidence in those fundamental values on which west- ern civilization has been built. Force and violence seem to he the only effective determinants, a world order based on any conception of brother- hood, of honour and of justice between individuals and nations seems very far away. At such a time, therefore, it is the more necessary that those who have some faith in the ultimate supremacy of spiritual values should re-assert that faith. No matter how dark the days may be, how trying the sacrifices we may be called upon to endure, we must continue to believe that human personality is a supreme value and that throughout the agony of these times there is, nevertheless, a Power in the world which makes for right- eousness. By virtue of its very nature education cannot bring about the immediate changes that can be accomplished by other more drastic methods. There never was a time in the history of the world, however, when education of the best sort was so necessary as it is to-day. Young minds must not be permitted to be scarred unnecessarily by the consideration of events. Ado- lescents, emotions and idealism must be trained to look forward with hope and faith to the future. It is on the shoulders of todayls children that will devolve the task of building the newer and better world. It is our responsibility as teachers and educators to inspire them with confidence that such a world can be, and to prepare them as adequately as possible to discharge nobly their responsibilities, both now and in the future. It is to this task that Pickering College has been, is, and, in the Provi- dence of God, will remain committed. l would like to express herein my renewed thanks to the board of management, the staff and the student-body, who, in the first year of the war have co-operated loyally and enthusiastically to make the past year one of the happiest and most successful that we have ever had. M. ZW 17 gin nzummemuratinn nf the life anh fnnrk nf Ellnrh fueeh-2-muir helnneh fguncrnur-General uf Clanahzx E ILl.l'S'l'RA'l'lUN SHOWS THE CHAPEL 5E'l l'lNLL ON 'IHI-I ULIIAS OF THE SVHUUI, MHNIORIAI, SERYHQI-I THE VOYAGEUR V OL. 13 1940 PUBLISHED BY THE STAFF AND STUDENTS OF PICKERING COLLEGE, NEWMARKE'P ONTARIO, CANADA Editorial URING THE MONTH OF JUNE 1940 again will pass out between the pillars of Pickering as in former years a group of students who have gained an academic standing enabling them to go on to a higher institution of learning, or enter into the business life of the country. Besides taking with them an education obtained from text books, it is hoped that they will also carry along one which they have learned from living in a community of fellows, everyone a different personality and having something to offer which will be of beneficial value to any person going out into a world of many and varied personalities. However, this world into which these graduates are going is not the same one that the students of former years went out into but one which is consumed with turmoil and havoc such as has never been known to man- kind. ln this world of to-day the Democracies are fighting for their con- tinued existence which is being endangered by a section of the human race saturated with the ideas of a fanatical power-seeking neurotic who cares not how he achieves his objective, and at the present no one seems to know what the future has in store for us. But whatever comes, let us all carry with us the memories, the resolve and the fine spirit of Pickering 1939-40. VAN LAUOHTON. UR FATHERS WERE told that every man had an indisputable right to ulife, liberty and the pursuit of happinessfi The wording of the final phrase of that slogan was unfortunate, for certain it is that we have misinterpreted it and set too much store by it until the lives of many of us are lived out in a frantic scramble after pleasure which we mistake for happiness. Our times have given us little help in the correction of this error. The world of advertising and cheap literature and motion pictures implies that a happy state consists in the ability to gratify each and every desire. More than this, much that we read and hear is a deliberate attempt to stimulate desire among a generation whose sales resistance has been so lowered that misery may actually result from the inability to obtain those nostrums for bliss which are recommended on every hand. Desires, impossible of gratification, are constantly being created for us who are so completely gullible that we reject none of them, who believe that happiness lies in the gratification of all desire, who believe that happiness is a state which may be achieved 19 THE VOYAGEUR :bs Hgugagcur Staff 19118 at H. P. Buchanan R. H. Perry B. A. W. Jackson T. E. Bamford J. Mcffulley IV. R. Henderson by constant pursuing, and who are so jealously sure of our right to that pursuit that we take it as tantamount to a sacred duty. Worst of all is this fact: that if we are not pursuing happiness we are discontented and that, since we do not know what the word means, we continually grasp at the imitations which are offered. Our upursuitw becomes a desperate chase after synthetic pleasures whose obtaining is even more disappointing than their inaccessibility had seemed. Yet let any factor challenge our right to that pursuit or make the pursuit impossible and our misery becomes the stuff of which crime and suicide and madness are made. In such a situation liberty becomes license, rights become prerogatives, and law becomes frustration. Happiness cannot be pursued, for happiness cannot be defined. If man has a sacred duty it is to grow, to realize to the full all his particular and special abilities so that late in life he may say to himself, ul have become a full man and completef' Let happiness and its pursuit be ignored. Let man work his work for the good of his soul, and so that he may not be ashamed when he speaks his own name. Let a man be what he will, poet or priest, merchant or grower or digger, let his work bring him tears or scars, disappointment or pain, frustration it will not, so be it he work. Let him ignore all soft and easy things, all short cuts to bliss, but rather grow to his full stature under the heavens and come to complete fruition under the sun. Then, god-like he may know the perfect happiness of the gods, and, being without desire, find peace. 20 THE VOYAGEUR Education and the War by JOSEPH MCCULLEY Headmaster, Pickering College, Newmarket, Ontario NE or THE MOST IMPORTANT MOTIVES that can influence human conduct is love of country. lVlost of us probably learned in our youth those words of Walter Scott commencing with the line, 'cBreathes there the man with soul so dead. It is not merely the particular house or locality that one calls home, but that sum total of traditions, customs, conventions and attitudes that are associated with one's own country. The citizen of Rome prided himself on that fact even though he lived on the furthermost bounds of the empire. It is easy enough to point out that the nation-state is a comparatively recent political development, this fact, however, is truer- that man has always felt a thrill of pride in belonging to his own tribal, national or racial group. That pride has almost invariably been associated with or focussed upon some specific home land-amy countryf' As a motivating force in determining human conduct, love of country or patriotism has been as important a factor as religion, and in some cases the two have been so closely bound together as to be almost indistinguish- able. The reason is basically the same. These two motives are among the strongest human emotions, in the final analysis it is emotions which largely determine conduct. There is another factor which must be recognized. War's appeal is, primarily, not to the base in man but rather to many of his finest feelings. The cynic, of course, reminds us that man is a fighting animal-that wars have been a permanent part of human history and that they always will be. The truth of this is questionable. The great periods of human progress have been periods of peace when man had an opportunity to turn his in- ventive and social genius towards the arts of civilization. Sane men every- where today recognize modern war as the greatest tragedy that can touch the human race. In the last war millions died in the hope that their sacrifice would result in the establishment of a better world. Today young men are enlisting for similar noble purposes-expressed in general terms: to rid the world of Hitlerism and to preserve a way of life that is based on respect for human personality and its basic and inalienable rights. ln some form or other it is this appeal which is made to our young men and not only to our young men but to the total population. It must be recognized that modern war is not fought by professional soldiers alone but that it is the concern of the total community. All our leaders unite today in stressing the necessity of a new Europe-or a new world order based on freedom and equality in the relationships of man with man and nation with nation. 21 THE VOYAGEUR Only this, they say, can make the war worth lighting. Even though the last great sacrifice did not achieve this purpose, we are at war now, hoping that the ultimate result of this struggle may be the establishment of a better world. This is the appeal to which a population responds and it is an appeal basically to idealism. The adolescent cannot remain deaf to this challenge. He will want to do something. Educators must be conscious of the strength of this impulse. It is one of the tragedies of war that whole populations become obsessed by mass hatreds. As the war increases in intensity there is bound to be an acceleration of this tendency. Leaders of the British people have, during the past few months, made a distinct difference between the system of government under which the German people live and the German people themselves. We should recognize that it is impossible to annihilate a whole nation, and further that the Germany of the past has contributed much that is worthwhile in the sum total of western culture. We must continue to hope and pray that the day may come when the German people under better leadership may once again be in a position to make a worthy contri- bution to the arts of civilization. Probably the finest word that has been said on this subject has been uttered by John Masefreld, Poet Laureate: This is no idle boast or empty story, Une of the glories of the English race Is, that we recognize Beethoven's glory, And at his dying moment won his grace, '4For, in Vienna, while the thunder broke, And he, by sickness shaken, sank to death, These memorable words that Master spoke, 'God bless the English, with his dying breath. And of our Poet we have heard you say 'We call him Unser Shakespearef, he is ours, We share him with you as we share the day, The night, the seasons, and the happy hours. 7 uWe are as darkness to each other now, Our common task of bettering Life annulled, We plait new brambles on our Saviouris brow, By sharpening hate our spirits, edge is dulled. '6Upon another morrow, an we strive, Our links of Life, now broken, may unite, Not each for each but both for all alive Opening the other shutters for more light. 22 THE VOYAGEUR If it is true that men can only be induced to fight by an appeal to his idealism, it is surely necessary for us to do everything in our power to strengthen the hands of those who, at the end of the struggle, will have the responsibility for creating a new world on the ruins of the old. If 'those purposes are to be achieved to which our leaders have given varying forms of expression, there must be behind the politicians at the end of the war a strong public opinion which will not rest content unless these expressed aims find some form of recognition in the settlement. Students who are now in our schools will be citizens when the time comes to make that settlement. ls it not one of our responsibilities to direct their thinking towards the problems that will arise at the end of the war? Not only the development of a satisfactory peace settlement, but those hundred and one other problems that arise as a war economy is turned once again to the tasks of peace time reconstruction. There may be very little that a high school student can do as an immediate job. We can, however, conserve his idealism by challenging him so to train and prepare himself that when the opportunity does arise, when he can give service, be it in war 'tirne or peace time, that he will be enabled to render his best service. Twenty-one years elapsed between the close of the last war and the out- break of the present one. One of the outstanding characteristics of this period in the history of all countries was the lack of youthful leadership. A whole generation of potential statesmen, artists, industrial and profes- sional leaders had been wiped out in the sacrifice of war. The world was the poorer for their loss. Must we not be the more conscious of the same possibility at the present time and do our maximum to prepare our young people at an earlier age than normally to accept the heavy responsibilities that will be theirs? This is basically a job of inspiration. I know, how- ever, of no other class in the community in a better position to provide such inspiration than are the teachers. They are in constant contact with young people and are familiar with their thinking. Even they, however, cannot perform this task unless they themselves have a firm conviction that there are values of a permanent character and of permanent validity NEW MEN ALL ' if 4 M ,,7' Science: Mr. Thomas Maths.: Mr. Colgrove Classics: Mr. Ward 23 THE VOYAGEUR in the life of man that will outlast any war, no matter how long or how destructive. lrwin Edman has well expressed this in his recently published essay entitled MA Candle in the Dark. Civilizations do not die. They may change. One of the outstanding qualities of all living organisms is the tenacity with which they hold on to life. We should recognize and impress upon our students that the greater the losses are, the heavier the responsibility of those who remain to carry aloft through changing circumstances and dark days, those ideals, those qualities, and those attitudes to life which mark man as a civilized human being. Even a young school child will wish to do something in response to the appeal that is made to his idealism and to his sense of adventure. Our governments have indicated that participation in active military service under the age of 19 is not desirable and that, in fact, it is a greater liability than it is an asset. During the last war students in our schools participated in practical projects of various kinds. The usoldiers of the soilw provided an outlet for adolescent boys who wished to contribute some measure of practical personal service. Various forms of Red Cross work were avail- able for both boys and girls and will undoubtedly be increasingly available during the present war. In recent times educators have stressed the value both from the point of view of personal and social development, of the project method in education. Here is a very real opportunity for teachers to develop projects which are of definite value to the community at large and which also provide scope for the idealism and the desire of the adoles- cent to be of some specific service. Asked during the last war when he thought the war would be won, Baden Powell-international youth leader-replied that it would be won in 1935. He implied that we would know by then what type of leadership would be in control of world affairs. The way things have developed, one must now question whether that war was won at all. lt is the heavy responsibility and the fine opportunity of the teachers of this generation to prove that they are equal to the task that is now laid upon them. The substance of this article appeared in TI-IE SCHOOL, Vol. XXVIII, No. 6. February, 1940. and is reprinted by pernzission. 24 THE VOYAGEUR Chapel Speakers DURING THE YEAR we have been very fortunate in having such a stimu- lating series of addresses at our Chapel services. Special services such as that at Christmas and Easter were especially enjoyable. Mention should also be made of the impressive service in remembrance of the late Lord Tweedsmuir. Those who have spoken at Chapel include the headmaster fseriesl and Messrs. Rourke, Statten, Perry, Holmes, Blackstock, Beer, Hodgetts, Colgrove, Stewart and Chipman of the staff. One service was conducted by the student committee under the leadership of Stan Harris, Creed, Hall and Laughtong another was directed by the remaining members of the committee,-MacDonald, Bruce Taylor, lVlyers and Henderson. Other speakers included Dr. George Patterson, lVIr. Donald Graham and Judge Mott. Anti-Nazi IN OUR ISSUE last year we were able to report the arrival in our school community of Dr. li. A. lVlaresch, his wife and young son, Bill. During the past year Dr. Maresch has been associated with our school Work, but has been left free of detailed responsibilities so that he would have time to carry out a very extensive lecture programme. During the past year Dr. Maresch has spoken to some hundred and twenty-five different clubs and organizations in all parts of Untario and Quebec. His most popular address was, unquestionably, the one entitled uNazi Germany from the ln- sidef, The outstanding engagement of his year was his address to the Women's Canadian Club of Toronto, when he spoke to an overflow meeting of some two thousand people at the Eaton Auditorium. ln order to fulfil many of his engagements Dr. Maresch had to arise with the birds and, in many cases, did not get back until the Hwee small hours of the next day. At times he was only able to complete a very full calendar of engagements at the risk of his own health. We are glad to say that he has survived and that he is still carrying on his good work. A number of engagements are already booked for the coming season. It has been an inspiration this year to have in our midst this family, who, having lost everything owing to the Nazi persecution in Austria, are now becoming adjusted to their new home, and who are intent on making the maximum contribution they can to our common cause. Bill is taking his place as a regular member of the student-body, and is rapidly acquiring a facile knowledge of his new language and adjusting himself to the new conditions of his life. We are glad to extend this additional welcome to the Maresch family from old Vienna, and hope that they will long be spared to enjoy their new home and to make a worthwhile contribution to the development of our Canadian culture and citizenry. 25 THE VOYAGEUR The Garratt Cane THIS YEAR the graduating class considered two, instead of one, of their fellow students to be outstanding enough in school life to win the coveted Carratt Cane. This award has been given for the past nine years to the student who is thought to have made the finest contribution to the school in every phase of its life. During their three years at college both Van Laughton and John Hall have distinguished themselves in practically every sphere of our life here at Pickering, and it was only fitting that upon their graduation the school should bestow upon them the highest honour it could give. fohn Hall Van Laughton Musical Programmes 'IWC OUR MUSICAL umaestrof, Clifford Poole, we extend our congratulations for his own fine performances at several musicales and for bringing to us such enjoyable talent as Nliss Phyllis Parker Miss Helen Guy GQ1'd0U Hallett . Bill Ross lstudenti Xllfiulghggitgivles Miss Margaret Parsons Gerald Rutledge Miss Nellye S1n1th Elizabeth Beer Miss Peggy Moreland George Haddad Mr- Jack Cash Mary McKinnon Shore Alice Strong Rourke On one occasion the well-known two piano team of Scott Malcolm and Reginald Godden gave a line performance at an open musicale, prior to their North American tour. 26 THE VOYAGEUR Valete GOING FROM OUR MIDST INTO BUSINESS or further academic work are- JACK BARTER, to Queen's. A uR0oter, first basketball, first hockey manager, author. BRUCE BISHOP, who took a short business course and was a Kosmo, first hockey and basketballer in the intervals. BRUCE CLARK, Polikoner. Some football, basketball. To farming. JOHN COOPER, Polikoner, first hockey manager, Widdrington Award, camera man and floral expert. EDWIN CREED, one of our Hold timersfi first football, basketball and hockey. Rooter. Actor and ace skier. Widdrington Award. To O.A.C. ALBERT DORLAND, the third brother. Kosmo Club. Rifle Club and hunter. To Western. HARRY FRANSSI, Twelve Club, first football and hockey. Student committee. Our giant goes to Queenas. CURRIE GARDNER, Polikon Club. First basketball team. To lVIclVIaster. CHARLES GRAHAM, Twelve Club. To business. JOHN HALL, Rooter, School Committee, first hockey and football. Widdrington Award, Garratt Cane. Follows brother James to McGill. STANLEY HARRIS, Kosmo Club. First football, basketball and hockey. School Committee. Going to Queen's. ROBERT HENDERSHOTT, Twelve Club. Football, our skiing ace. DICK HENDERSON, President Kosmo Club, Student Committee, first team football, Voyageur staff. To business. STUART HENRY, Secretary Kosmo Club, first team football and hockey. Track man, captain of winning Silvers. Good pace setter in ski cross country runs. To business. WILLIAM JAY, Kosmo Club. Delighted with life, his laugh has no fffontinuecl on page 4,22 Our genial Dr. Case on Sports Day. 27 THE VOYAGEUR LITERARY .. John Buchan by PETE SCHOPFLOCHER OHN BUCHAN was born in 1876 in Perth of a Scotch border-family. He went to Oxford where he took up law and writing in his spare time. He served in the Boer war and on his return he opened a practice in law. From 1914 to 1917 he was a war correspondent at the front and when he was recalled because of ill health he was made minister of information. Soon he became interested in publishing and he was affiliated with the house of HThos. Nelson 81 Sonsw who published his books which he still wrote as a sideline. He was very interested in ancient, medieval and modern history and he wrote many books on these subjects. The best known one is his history of the Great War. ln the 20's he was a member of British parlia- ment and then for a time he was head of the Presbyterian church of Scot- land. His hobbies still were writing and different sports and he was a very good sportsman. ln 1935 he was appointed Governor-General of Canada and chose the title uBaron Tweedsmuir of Elsfieldfi ln his 5 year term he was prob- ably the most beloved Governor-General of Canada to date and he was also a very able executive. He had so endeared himself to the Canadian people that it was a great shock when he died in February, 1911-0 after a week's illness. As a writer John Buchanls name will live on forever in the memory of his readers through such works as Wfhe Four Adventures of Richard Han- nayi' and wllhe Path of the Kingfl As a Governor-General of Canada his name will long remain in the memory of the Canadian people. Nemesis by JACK BARTER NEMESIS WAS A SMALL MAN, as far as stature went. He stood a mere five feet three inches high, was of slight build, calm looking, and, in spite of his size, carried himself with a look of dignity that was unmistakable as being that of a man with power. For, Nemesis had power-a great deal, as a matter of fact. His face was oval, thin, and his eyes shone out of 28 THE VOYAGEUR his white face like two twin coals of dark water, seen from the air. His hair was grey, thinned a bit at the temples. Nemesis lounged in a chair, reading an Edgar Walla'ce novel. His room was small, cozy and seemed to contrast vividly with the air of fatalism and despondency that was evi- dent in the man's face. At one end of this room was a small door, guarded by the notice, uDo Not Enter. This was Nemesis' sanctum, an inner room in which he plied his trade, for, he was a tradesman, of a sort. He glanced at the clock, muttered to himself, and lit a cigarette. Ten to eight. Ten minutes more, then Nemesis could go to sleep. The little manfs thoughts wandered to the prospect of the job to be done. lt would be easy, this time. He wouldnft mind his calling if all his projects were as clear as this one was. The hands moved inexorably to eight. At five minutes before the hour, Nemesis moved slowly towards the door. Casting a look about him as he passed through, he wondered how long he had been doing this. Nine years, next month, was the score of his time spent in this small place. He moved to a switch set in the wall, a massive brass and copper mechanism that sent thousands of amperes singing through the thick copper cables under the fioor. His wrist-watch indicated eight o'clock. He flung the switch and grasped a rheostat. Swinging it to the quarter mark, he closed it, then swiftly moved it over to full. The lights dimmed for a minute, 'then bright- ened, as the generators throbbed under the load. Ten seconds ticked off on the wall clock. He closed the rheostat, swung the switch off, and sat down. It always affected him this way. Too bad there had to be men who mur- dered others, for in the end he always got them. Great thing, these electric chairs! The Widd rin gton Award AST YEAR the staff of the school instituted a new award for the boys who, in their opinion, gave the most unselfish contribution to school life. Mr. G. N. T. Widdrington, upon leaving the school, offered to donate a plaque so as to make the award more permanent. This year at the Athletic Dinner the beautiful plaque was unveiled and the four winners of the award were congratulated by lVlr. Widd1'ington. This year's winners were John Hall, Van Laughton, John Cooper and Ed. Creed. 29 THE VOYAGEUR Spring Fever by JACK BART1-:R There always seems to come to me When buds break out upon the tree, A kind of restless, longing pain That April sometimes soothes with rain. When the earth once more is green And raindrops, with their brushes, clean Black dirt from elms and maple trees, Who cradle new life on their knees. The pine trees too are freshened by The gentle offerings of the sky, Their green cones mutter all around That life anew her trumpets sound. Up in the sky the birds return With happy notes, new songs they learn, While in the field the patient dog Stalks frightened gopher in a log. When sap is running, snow has gone, When all our future seems to dawn Before our ever-wond'ring eyes, At spring, our nature's Paradise. The Secretarial Stay?--long unsung. Miss V Thompson, Miss M. Richardson, Mrs. E. F. Streeter 30 THE VOYA GEUR Tl1e Venture by D. HASKELL THE SUN was just rising, in a cloudless sky, as they left the city behind them and headed for an unexplored region north of Lake Payne. They followed a blue ribbon of water, that threaded its way for about twenty miles, through the deep shadowy valleys of the nearby mountains. Then suddenly the car skidded off the road, hitting a tall, stately elm, as it rounded the hairpin turn. The crash, which could be heard for miles, was followed by a ghostly silence. From this silence came a hoarse voice, whis- pering, uHilda darling, are you all right?', No sound was heard from the limp form that he held in his arms. Now, as John passed through the partly open door, he saw a thin, pathetic figure of a once beautiful woman, lying as still as if in some far distant land. She lifted her eyes from the book she was reading and upon seeing her husband a smile broke through the long jagged scars on her white face. ul wish,', said John, MI could find out why you are always so happy and gay, despite such a dreadful handicap. HWell, l'll tell youf' said Hilda, 'cl will never give up the hope of recovering the use of my legs, because it is only when you think you are beaten that you really aref, He had to admire her courage and determination to overcome such a great handicap. Then his mind would involuntarily go back to the stormy night that he and his wife had planned their fateful trip. If he had not seen that open map on the table, all this might have been averted. PHOTOGRAPH ACKNOWLEDGMENTS- Page 18-Green, pp. 20, 23, 26, 27, 30-Perry, pp. 33, 34-T Green, p. 35-Perry, pp. 39, 42+-Green, p. 43-Perry, p. 47- Buddg pp. 52, 53, 54-Perry, p. 55-Budd, pp. 56, 58-Perry. 31 THE VOYAGEUR Blackout by JACK BARTER ICHT, BLACK AS THE SHADOWS on the River Styx, drooped a funereal -L pall of ebony over the once-gay streets of London. Gone were the merry cafes, the busy rush of Londoners bent on pleasure, business, or the task of living. The population was decimated. Death was the conqueror in this final blackout. The mighty generators that once had fed their rushing rivers of power to that great city were stilled forever. They rusted silently in their faded housings, copper tarnished, steel monsters covered with dust. For now there was no one to run them, to pride in their roaring efficiency. ln the middle of Trafalgar Square a shattered mound of cement marked the monument to Lord Nelson, the board pavement ripped and torn where a new type nitrol bomb had found its final resting place twenty years before. The buildings in the streets seemed ghosts of their former selves, windowless, dusty, uninhabited save for the bats which looped and spun through the dreary corridors. Now and then a brick, loosened by wind and rain, tumbled from a projecting cornice to fall with a dull crunch of the unyielding cement below. The shrouded moon rose out of a cloudy grave, a rusted signboard, once glittering with neon, creaked dismally in the soft wind. Over the ground a white mist, partially obscuring the ruins of an anti-aircraft gun emplacement, from which the lean slim barrel pointed crazily to the sky, silent now, with no object for its deadly cough. The moonlight crept into a wide doorway, illuminating briefly a skeleton, crushed almost beyond recognition by the detonation and concussion of high explosive shells. The date of construction carved in the cement above the door, nineteen forty one, was half obliterated by a sheet of metal blasted from the roof by continued explosions. A half-wild rabbit scurried across an open space, disappearing into an open doorway. They had nothing to fear now, they were immune to human diseases. An overturned cab lay on the sidewalk, seemingly emblem- atic of the vanity of the human race-they could conquer material things, earth, sea and sky had bowed to their inventive genius, but now that genius had been lost. ln London there still lived men, born amid the shriek of air-raid sirens and the screams of wounded civilians. Death leaned over their shoulders with the first movement of their tiny limbs. They skulked like shadows amid the ruins, satisfied with mere sustenance. Civilization had overstepped itself, and had fallen back a thousand years. Wars had fostered more wars, and man had reduced his vaunted standards to those of the primeval. He would rise again, perhaps to fall once more, perhaps to evolve on a higher plane of understanding, a better, more ef- ficient civilization, for trumpets would blow beyond the stars and man would rise and follow to greater heights, not of mere conquest, but of achievement. The best of life would be rediscovered, and once more man would conquer the vastnesses that lay ahead. 32 THE VOYAGEUR School Committee IW VAN LAUCHTON URING THE EARLY WEEKS of the school year a temporary school com- mittee was elected by the senior students to carry on until the student body became acquainted with themselves. This committee consisted of Hall, Creed, Harris and Henderson, with co-chairmen Laughton and B. Taylor. When the time came for a permanent school committee to be elected, it was decided to elect four permanent members for the Whole fall term and four non-permanent members for a period of one month, when then they would be up for re-election or substitution by the student body. The four permanent members were as follows: Laughton, Chairman, Hall, B. Taylor, S. Harris. Non permanent: Henderson, Creed, Myers, Mac- donald. At the end of one month the same committee was re-elected and was in ofhce for the winter term. The spring term committee consisted of S. Harris, Chairman, Henderson, Creed, Hall, Myers, B. Taylor, Macdonald, and a new member, Franssi. Laughton, due to illness, was made an honor- ary member. The staff was ably represented all year by the presence of Mr. Beer. The Committee this year endeavoured to try and create a bigger and better Pickering and it would like to take this opportunity to thank the student body as a whole for their line co-operation during the year 1939-41-O. Standing: Hall, Franssi, Creed. Sitting: Mr. Mcffulley, MacDonald 1'Sec'ylg Laughton and Harris lQChairrnenlg Henderson, Mr. Beer. 33 THE VOYAGEUR Scene from C6The Last Milen The Dramatic Club by F. D. L. STEWART ii .... the audience there Thrillecl through all changes of Despair, Hope, Anger, Fear, Delight, and Doubt. HE 1939-740 season of The Pickering College Dramatic Club was a happy one, because of both the variety of plays produced and the interested participation of some twenty-five students. Satire, comedy, and melodrama characterized the Parents, Day offerings, and the Club's final production in the winter term was a stark and gripping tragedy. Calsworthyis wllhe Little Mann was concerned with displaying the true greatness that the smallest and most insignificant of people may possess, the greatness which lies in tolerance and unselfishness. calf lVlen Played Cards as Women Dow poked ridiculous fun at the foibles and verbal indis- cretions of the fair sex when they gather, for good or evil, around the card-table. The third play in the Autumn group was marked by suspense and eeriness, when a simple old English couple were brought into contact with supernatural forces unleashed by a magic monkeyis paw. mThe Last lVlile,' was a tense and realistic portrayal of a group of criminals awaiting death by electrocution. The cruel uselessness of the death penalty was suggested, and criticism of a social system which must produce murderers implied. The actors themselves best know how difficult it is to comment upon individual performances, because a play is successfully produced only 34 THE VOYAGEUR when everyone concerned gives of his best: that was the case with these Pickering College plays. Nevertheless, it may be permitted to say that Beeris characterization of 'fthe little mann was honest and thorough, that Cornell displayed almost professional versatility in doing good work as a lovable old lady in '4The Monkey's Paw and as a hardened and cynical criminal in Wfhe Last Milevg and that the sincerity and emotional force of Hendersonis 'cliichard Walters set a high standard for future performers. But each of these was dependent, as is every actor, on the ability and sup- port of his fellow workers. Mr. Renzius, Mr. Hilts, Mr. Jackson, Dick Craighead, and others gave generously of time and effort and stagecraft, and Miss Ancient and Mrs. Green assisted with costumes and make-up. To Miss Ancient the members of the Club are specially grateful for her interest and delightful hospitality. The Glee Club THE GLEE CLUB presented '4The Pirates of Penzancei' with a spirit so con- tagious that the audience seemed no body of mere onlookers, but an active sub-vocal chorus, entering into the moods of the opera like part of the cast. When beauteous Alice Rourke sang so melodiously uPoor Wander- ing Onef' every male in the hall was a Frederic. The lady spectators were all daughters of Major General Bob Rourke when their sisters on the stage peppered their sixty-mile-an-hour verdict uHe is the very model of a modern major-general. Pirate King Bell MacDonald had all the men in the audi- ence doing mental piratical swaggers by the end of the first act, while Betty Holmes Beer engagingly persuaded the ladies to Hgaily tread the measure. Giving it the business during the upiralesfi 35 THE VOYAGEUR But the second act was too much for the audience-cast. They broke down at the entrance of the policeman, forgot their cues, and just roared. Eddie Creed cut short all further uprojectionn fspeaking psychoanalyticallyl on the part of the audience with? his inimitable characterizations of the sergeant, about to ago to slaughter. The trio, in which the King was joined by G.N.T. uFrederic Widdrington, and Maire '4Ruth'7 Davies was ruthless and exciting. And then when all the stage-cast assembled, under various pretexts, for the grand finale, with both swash-buckling Samuels flfiliot Frosst and Bill Rossj and the Major-Generalis next two talented daughters Q Irene Armstrong and Florence Goldsmithl on hand, the audience-cast once more identified itself with the performance, and brought the curtains together with every throat in the house, vocally and sub-vocally, sounding triumphantly. It was the season's concentrated rehearsals plus several social functions under the direction of Messrs. Rourke and Poole lwith assistance by Pete Colgrovej which welded the excellent principals, the lovely girls, chorus, and the unidentiliable pirates and policemen into so forceful a production. With Gwendolyn Koldofskyis sure accompaniment, and stage sets of outstanding effectiveness by Rudy Renzius, Barney Jackson and Dick Craighead, the show was complete. The proceeds, almost exactly 320000, were donated to the Y.M.C.A. War Services Fund. The Kosmo Club by E. c. BEER THAT AUGUST AND RoYAL Assoc1AT1oN of elevated intellects known in com- mon parlance as the Kosmo Club enjoyed this year its lifth successful season since its inaugural in 1935. As usual the benevolent eye and cheery humour of uPop,' Perry watched over proceedings in inimitable fashion. Oflicers were as follows: President-Dick Henderson, Vice-President-Stan Harris, Secretary-Stu Henry, Treasurers-uBud,, Mack and Ward Cornell. To them go the heartiest congratulations of the rest of the club for a job well done. This year may be regarded as a landmark in the clubis career, in that a written constitution was prepared by a select committee and approved by the other members. This filled a sad gap in the club's equipage. Meetings, held in the Blue Room were well provided with speakers, both guest and otherwise. Mr. B. Henderson, Mr. Ted Buxton, Mr. Gordon Hepburn, Miss Mary Owens, Mr. Jack Holmes, and Messrs. Blackstock, Colgrove, Chipman, Thomas, Perry, Stewart, Jackson, Buchanan, all said their bit. A joint meeting with the Polikon Club was held and there were also many heated discussions among ourselves. The year ended with a banquet at which Dr. Harry Ebbs told about his dramatic aerial visit to the Canadian Arctic. 36 THE VOYAGEUR Athletically the club had only one encounter, that with their old chums 'fthe Rooters, and emerged victorious. In closing, high-lights not to be left out are the unsurpassed feeds laid out by each week's caterers, the unforgettable minutes of Stu Henry, and three term-end banquets, worthy conclusions to ua good timef, The Rooters by JACK BARTER HE ROOTERS began their 1939-40 season with six of last year's members. To this select group were added three new members, leaving the club with the smallest number in recent years. A fine club spirit was in evi- dence all year, and under the financial genius of HSuckertary7, Van Laughton, the club prospered-and so did Van. The cuisine was of very high calibre-except once. Several excursions were undertaken by the club, the most interesting of which was a jaunt to the Museum of Natural History in Toronto, where, under the patronage of Mr. Kurata, we discovered all there was to know about spiders, dinosaurs and stuff. A second venture to lVlcLean's Publishing Company was a fascinating one. As guest speakers we had several Rooter Old Boys, Dr. Cox from Newmarket, Dr. Maresch of the school, and the Headmaster. Our final banquet came off in a blaze of glory, with nourishment by Oscar of the Waldorf, and a gripping story of aviation by lVlr. Flack, president of Toronto Flying Club. The year was a full one, and as enjoyable from our standpoint as any experienced yet. To R. E. K. Rourke, the presiding genius of the club, we offer our thanks and appreciation for a throughly enjoyable season. Polikon Club by BILL MAYO URING THE YEAR the Polikon Club held many lively debates. Some of the topics were about current politics and questions of government and economics. Two of this type of debates were. uCompulsorv School Age in Ontario ,Should be Raised to Eighteen? and HThe C.C.F. Party W0llld Form a Better Government Than Wotlld the Conservative or Liberal Partiesf, Other debates were of the lighter type such as ulVlen's Clothes are More Sensible Than Women'sl The outstanding speakers of the year were: Mr. McCullev who entitled one of his talks c'Background of the Present International Situationf, Dr. Marcsch who spoke on HThe European Situationfl Nlr. Colgrove who in a 37 THE VOYAGEUR joint meeting with the Kosmos baffled us all with his talk entitled '4The Fourth Dimensionf, and Mr. Thomas who spoke on Motor Fuels of Eur- opef, Also many other enjoyable evenings were spent over impromptu speeches. The year was brought to a successful close late in May by a very scrumptious final banquet in the Music Room of the school. Mr. T. W. L. lVlacDermot, Headmaster of U.C.C., was the guest speaker. He gave a very enlightening talk, entitled 'gCanada and the War.', The Camera Club by JACK TUTTLE HE CAMERA CLUB started off with a fast click of the shutter this year and as far as meetings were concerned, kept up a good record until after the Christmas holidays. Parent's Day at the college was a big day for the Club. Every member, fthere are about eighteenl, submitted no less than two photographs apiece. All of these pictures were enlarged on the clubis new enlarger which was purchased at the beginning of the year. After Parents' Day the dark room and enlarger were in constant use by members of the club. We all hope that the future Camera Clubs of Pickering get as much real fun out of developing and printing as this year's club did. Our thanks go to Cordie Thomas who put a great deal of effort into keeping the members continually interested in this interesting hobby. 38 THE VOYAGEUR ?,,,..,.,.,. ......, ,,v:,A .... -L A. .. .H . Mr. Colgrooe's Twelve Club, interested in matters fourth dimensional. Mr. McCulley,s clebaters and political minded' Polihoners. Mr. Perryis globe girclling and geographical Kosmo Club. Mr. Rourke's Root of Minus Une Club, concerned with problems scientific. lApparatus kindly loaned by the Twelve Club.l The Firth House Honour Award THIS AWARD, in the form of an oak plaque, was donated by an old boy of the school and was awarded for the first time at the Athletic Banquet. It is presented to the boy who is considered by both staff and students of Firth House to have given the finest contribution to the life of the house. This yearis winner was Keith Garrett, who was practically the unanimous choice of his fellow students and of the staff of the house. 39 THE VOYAGEUR Autumn Dance by CURRIE GARDNER N THE NIGHT of November ll, 1939, everyone was able to glimpse that wonderful Honew whom his best friend or roommate had been raving about since September. It was the occasion of Pickering's annual Informal and was well-attended as usual by students young and old. Music was played by Art West and his orchestra, who presented appropri- ate numbers for even the jitterbug class. During intermission everyone was served a delicious picnic lunch packed in individual boxes. This was eaten in the softly-lighted dining-room at tables small enough for two, or large enough for ten, depending uponthe amount of privacy desired by each couple. Dancing was later continued and a variety of novelties given to everyone after which things reached a hilarious pitch. Like all good things the evening soon came to an end and another evening of memories at Pickering had been made. Christmas Banquet by TERRY BAMFORD HE NIGHT OF DECEMBER 19 was the occasion of the annual Christmas banquet. As usual a sumptuous turkey dinner was consumed and en- joyed by all, in the colourfully decorated school dining-hall. Following the meal Santa Claus made his triumphant entrance, amid loud cheering, and distributed presents by the dozen. Among them was the shovel, this year given to the staff of the Quaker Cracker. The singing of Auld Lang Syne brought to a close a very happy and successful evening. The Formal Dance by CURRIE GARDNER HIS SWANK AFFAIR was attended by a large number of students, their friends, and a few old boys, all looking very smart in their utailsw and accompanied by some of the loveliest Hyoung things this town has ever seen. Couples glided over the well-waxed floor to the sweet strains of Art West's orchestra while ,lay rushed madly around the room doing one of 40 THE VOYAGEUR his inimitable steps. There were a few novelty dances with prizes, but no rhumbas ftoo bad Ernestol. At intermission everyone went expectantly to the nicely-decorated dining- room where they were rewarded by a delicious lunch prepared by our eflicient dietitian, Miss lVlcCulley. After everyone had devoured as much as they dared on such a formal occasion, dancing was resumed and novelties galore were distributed among the revelers. - After the dance the great majority of the crowd found themselves at the Chez Paree where they were again delightfully entertained and fed and at no expense to themselves. Many thanks from all the gang to the person or persons who so kindly arranged such a wonderful surprise to end another Pickering dance. The Easter Cruise Restless day-coach sleep Kaleidoscopic New York with overcoats Ornate modern S.S. Nieuw Amsterdam Swarms of Private School girls J ACK SPAULDING Girls not from Private Schools Blue warm Gulf Stream No overcoats Swimming pool GHENT DAVIS Cool luxurious dining hall Brown wrinkled hills of Haiti Shirt sleeves and palm trees Tropical Port au Prince via life boat Dusty mountainous ride up into interior Smelly market place and French Phosphoresence and flying fish Sunrise and Morro Castle PETE COLGROVE Piratical tales of Havana and French ties ERNESTO GONZALES C. Liquid voluble Spanish Lights on the lVlalecon drive at dawn Cool green Atlantic Suitcoats Overcoats Kaleidoscopic New York Sleepless day-coach rest. 41 THE VOYAGEUR Gentlemen of the Upper Business Department VATIETE fCor1tinue1lfr0n1 page 272 equal. To business. VAN LAUGHTON, Rooter. Chairman Student Com- mittee, first team football. Widdrington Award. Garratt Cane. Headed for Queen's. ROBERT LEBROCQ, Polikoner. First team football. Track star. Probably to University of Toronto. WILLIAM MAYO, Polikoner. Junior football. lVlclVIaster or business. TOMMY MYERS, Twelve Club. First team football, Captain first hockey team. WILLIAM MACDONALD, Polikon Club. Secretary School Committee. Dra- matics. First basketball team. Perhaps to Queen's. JAMES MCCOMB, Twelve Club. First football and hockey teams. To business. EUGENE ONYSCHUK, the uJeep'7. Football star. Rooter. Manager hockey team. To Queen's. JACK RANKIN, Polikoner. Ski team. To University of Toronto. One of our five year men. ALLAN ROGERS, Twelve Club. Another of our five year men. First team football and hockey. To University of Toronto. WILLIAM TODD, Twelve Club. First team football. To business. HENRY WALLWIN, first team football. Hockey goaler. To business. BRUCE TAYLOR. rooter. First team football and hockey. To business. JOHN VUILLIAMSON, first team hockey. Lacrosse ace. To Normal School. 42 THE VOYAGEUR Old Boys' Section EXECUTIVE 1940 President: HERBERT MILLER - 51 De Vere Gardens, Toronto. Treasurer: KEITH ROBINSON - 71 St. Edmund's Dr., Toronto. Committee: JACK MACTAVISH - 45 Stibbard Avenue, Toronto. JACK MEREDITH -- 88 Teddington Pk. B., Toronto. DOUGLAS MORGAN - 16 Williamson Rd., Toronto. JACK RAYNER - 92 lVlacLennan Ave., Toronto. LD BOY ACTIVITIES during the 1939-40 season have been various and on the whole successful. A dinner for uWiddy7' and uBrandy,, brought out a hundred and guest speaker Walter Bowles. An evening dance in Toronto came on a bad evening and didn't Htakef' The hockey night and dance at the School and a later informal dance were well attended. AS usual Sports' Day and its Tea Dance brought out many Old Boys, and new cars. Last year's c'Voyageur,, listed the activities of some 116 Old Boys. We are listing only additions or notable changes--i.e., enlistments, matrimony, directors of large corporations, graduations, scholarships, etc. Old Boy paid up memberships are hopeful, but not overwhelming. Your fees entitle you to a uVoyageur,' and, more important, help us to keep the association alive by sending you occasional news letters. We can always count on 0. B. at Sports Day 43 THE VOYAGEUR Old Boys on Active Service BAILEY, R. Y.-R.C.A.F. BARTON, W. S.-Flight-Lt., R.A.F. foverseasi. BUSKARD, B.-R.C.A.F. toverseasi. BURNETT, JOHN E., Tor. Scottish foverseasi. CONNOR, DR. RALPH-Capt. Can. Dental Corps. CLARKE, JOHN-Lieut. 48th Highlanders foverseasi. CLELAND, DOUG.-Pilot Officer, R.C.A.F. COPP, TED-R.A.F. foverseasi. ' CARMICHAEL, HOWARD-R.C.O.C. foverseasi. COULSON, JOHN-48th Highlanders toverseasi. HALE, ED.-Pilot Officer, R.C.A.F. HALL, IAS.-Pilot Officer, R.C.A.F. HOLMES, WENDELL-Lieut., Essex Tanks. J EFFERY, R. H.'c.hPi10i onacef, R.c.A.F. KERNOHAN. GORDON E., Lieut., R.C.N.V.R. foverseasi. LANDER, JOHN-R.C.A. toverseasi. McLAREN, KEN.-R.C.A.F. MINCHINTON, ED. C.-Pilot Officer, R.A.F. foverseasi. MINNES, A. C., Dr.-Capt., R.A.M.C. MORRISON, BRUCE-Lieut., Royal Regiment. OILLE, WM., Dr.-Lieut., R.A.M.C. with R.C.A. OSBORNE, J. S.-Sgt., Royal Canadian Engineers. PALMER, H. Z.-Lieut., R.C.A. toverseasi. PRICE, H. J.-2nd Lieut., Gov. Gen. Horse Guards. RICHARDSON, C. D. Bud -Pilot Officer, R.A.F. foverseasi. ROOS, ROBT. P.-R.C.A.S.C. ioverseasi. ROSS, DUNCAN B.-Temporary Suh-Lieut., Royal Navy. ROSS, G. WM.-Gunner, Royal Artillery foverseasi. STORMS, PETER-Lieut., R.C.A. WAKEFIELD, EDGAR-Pilot Oflicer, R.A.F. foverseasi. fWe would appreciate being advised of additions or corrections that should be made to this list.-J. McC.i Flight-Lti HWally Barton Pilot Ojficer Ed. Minchinton 44 THE VOYAGEUR On the award cf his Ph.D. Ph.D. on Chemical Re- search after three years of strenuous endeavour at McGill University, Rodger Dorland was asked to continue his work for a fur- ther year, along the lines of his re- search project. He has recently been offered and has accepted an import- ant post in the Research Department of The Masonite Corporation, Laur- el, Mississippi, whither he has gone with his bride to take up residence. Congratulations again. Owing to the sudden On Leave death of his father, Wal- lie Barton was given a short leave to Canada. He has been in France for nine months, and par- J ticipated in the epic evacuation from Dunkirk. We extend sympathy to Pilot Ujicer uBud,' Richardson Wallie in the deaths of his brother and his father within a year. We are proud of the part he has played, and extend to him our good wishes for the best of luck as he returns to take up his duties in England. Marriages, 1939-40 BARTON-GIDDINGS-At the Parish Church, Odiham, Hants, England, on Sep- tember 20th, Joan Helen Giddings to Wallace Stanley Barton. BROWN-MULHOLLAND-At Calvin Presbyterian Church, Madeline Rowena Mulholland to Joseph James Brown. CARMICHAEL-ARNOTT-At Burns United Church., Sarnia, December 21st, Marjory Helen Arnott to Howard Carmichael. DORLAND-CALDER-At Montreal, Que., on August 5th, Jean Calder to Rodger Malone Dorland. LANGS-GREENING-At Hamilton, January 24th, Alexandra Greening to James R. Langs. MACTAVISH-CLIFTON-At Toronto on May 30th, Dorothy Helen Clifton to John A. MacTavish. 45 THE VOYACEUR OILLE-OHMAN-At Toronto, May 18th, Hazel Ohman to Dr. William A. Oille. PEACE-BEADMAN-At Moosonee on January 3rd, Mary Elnor Beadman, to James lVlcVean Peace. PALMER-CRERAR-Al Aldershot, England, on January 6th, Peggy Crerar to Lieut. H. Z. Palmer. ROBINSON--GOOCH-At North Toronto, on October 14th, Peggy Gooch to Keith Robinson. SLAGHT--BUTLER-At Toronto on October 14th, Elizabeth Anne Butler to Peter Lewis Slaght. SLACHT-STEVENS - At Cobalt, on May the 18th, Christine Iona Stevens to Patrick John Slaght. STORMS-STEWART--At Toronto, on February 17th, Isabel Stewart to Peter H. Storms. WATT-MACDONALD - At Toronto, on September 29th, Olive Mae MacDonald to Dougles Ruther- ford Watt. WAKEFIELD-ABNEY-HASTINGS - At Loudoun Castle in Galston, Ayr- shire, Scotland, on March 23rd, Lady Jean Abney-Hastings, to Pilot Ollicer Edgar Wight Wake- field. Woooaow-FISHER - At Iroquois, on June lst, Phyllis Roslyn , Fisher to Hugh J. Woodrow. Lwut' H' Z' Palme' WILSON-COWPER - At Dundas, Ontario, on November 20th, Dorothy Charlotte Cowper to Robert Edward uBud Wilson. Staff Weddings CHIPMAN-DEWITT-At Wolfville, N.S., June 29th, Betty, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. C. E. Avery deWitt to Adelbert lVl. Chipman. WARD--BROWN-At Knox College Chapel, Toronto, June 15th, lvy Vernon daughter of Mr. and lVlrs. S. C. Brown, to Harvey Lloyd Ward. 46 THE VOYAGEUR Senior Rugby Team by BILL MACDONALD COACHED BY THE able fire-brand lVlr. A. B. Hodgetts, Pickering's First Rugby Team of 1939 was a unit of precision and power, deluxe. Hard and arduous training resulted in a team with great strength along the line and better than average ability in the backfield. With line and backfield working together like piston and wheel, our boys fought their way through a season without a single set-back and only one tie game. The season opened with the usual game with the Old Boys. The Seniors proved the necessity of conditioning and training and easily drove the Old Boys down to defeat. The next two games, with Lawrence Park Collegiate and Trinity College School respectively, were easily won by our Firsts. The three successive victories seemed to go to the heads of our players then, with the result that the next three games, with U.T.S., St. lVlichael,s and U.T.S. again, were hard fought and slow. U.T.S. was finally beaten both times by a narrow margin but St. lVlichael's held our Seniors to their only tie of the season. A game with Brampton saw the Firsts click once more and Brampton was snowed under by the onslaught they met. The last game of the season was with our old rivals, Upper Canada College, who found difficulty fathoming our fast passing plays and could not defeat an exceed- ingly strong desire to win. Following this victory, the team complete with managers, coaches, trainer and Headmaster, was the guest of lVlrs. Rogers at a dinner at the Granite Club. Thus ended a wholly satisfactory and gratifying season,-much of the success of which was largely due to the fine coaching of Mr. Hodgetts to whom thanks are duly expressed by the First Team. A fter all these years undefeated 47 THE VOYACEUR Thumbnail Sketches of the first Rugby Team by A. B. HODGETTS BEFORE PROCEEDING with my alloted task l would like to say again that it was a real pleasure to work with the first football squad this year. lt will be probably many years before we build such a team again. lVlost of the players returned to school last fall as seasoned veterans fully knowing the college system of play. We are very sorry to see the team break up- after some three or four years together-but such things are among the reasons why rugby coaches have nervous breakdowns. lVlany of this year's squad are planning on continuing the great fall pastime next year. Wher- ever you go, l would like, personally, to wish each and everyone of you the best of luck. JOHN HALL uCaptain Johnnie moved from the outside wing to the half line this year and more than justified the move. He hits the centre of the line well, and is a good first man on an end run. His team loyalty, fighting spirit and ability will be an asset to any team. ED. CREED has finally completed his career with us. After counting on him for six years to fill the quarterback position, he will be a hard man to replace. Ed. was a fine field general, a good plunger and passer and a capable running half. ALLAN ROGERS :-left middle, right middle, inside etc., Al was a good all-round line man and a real pepper-pot. Play from scrimmage left noth- ing to be desired. HARRY FRANSSI:-Hank played a fine steady game at left middle. Better offensively perhaps, than defensively-having a slight tendency to- wards charging blindly on every play. GENE ONYSCHUK:-has held down an inside berth for three years. A real Nmuckern on the line, with plenty of offensive and defensive ability. VAN LAUGHTON:-Handicapped by injuries, Van nevertheless played grand football along the line, having fine defensive intuition in sizing up opponentis plays. One of those enthusiastic spark-plugs, so vital to the success of any team. TOMMY MYERS:-called on to fill Gord Hayfs position at snap. And how well he did itl Tackling at centre secondary left nothing to be desired. BRUCE TAYLOR:-plunging half and secondary defense man deluxe. When Benny was on his game he was our best ball carrier and a deadly tackler. Has improved his play every year for three years and his position will be difficult to fill next fall. 48 THE VOYAGEUR VIC WOOD:-another' old-timer, whose return to school last fall was a real and pleasant surprise. Vic continued his fine kicking, being steadier than last year, and his ball carrying and defensive work improved im- mensely. STU HENRY:-After being shifted to nearly every position last year, Stu finally landed this year, at right end. Here he turned in a fine game, being good defensively, and our best pass-receiver. STAN HARRIS:-came from Humberside Cl., and fitted in perfectly to our style of play. A fine pass receiver, good ball carrier, and one of the best tacklers seen in these parts for many years. BOB LEBROCQ:--Bob continued to improve this year, thus earning a regular berth at left end. Here he tackled well, especially from scrimmage, his blocking was good and he used his speed to advantage. JIM lVIcCOlVlB:-A good all-round utility half. His lightness was a real handicap but when given a chance he played well and sometimes rose to stardom. WALLY GUBERMAN:-right inside and utility lineman. 'cGobs,, improved as the year wore on, and by the end of the season was as good as any up front. We are looking forward to his return as one of the Hold guardw next year. GHENT DAVIS:-moved up from the juniors. Had enough good sense to realize that this was a seasoning year. When called upon to play, he did very well-lacking only confidence in himself. JACK GORMAN:-played part of the season with seniors and part with juniors. Lack of experience was his chief hindrance. As a first year player he performed creditably, and showed ability as a ball carrier and lineman. DICK HENDERSON :-our shoe string tackler, was out a good deal with illness. Over a period of years Dick has played some exceptionally fine games for the college. BOB HENDERSHOTT:-handicapped by lack of weight and injuries, Bob had to be content with a utility half position. Later played junior and really shone in the half position. CHUCK GRAHAM :-The only one of the new boys who played with us. Lacking experience in the game he proved to be a unaturalw tackler. Although not given a fair chance to show his wares at the beginning of the season uChuck,7 played excellent rugby at end during the latter part of the season. 49 THE VOYAGEUR THE PERMANENT CROCKS:-at the beginning of the season were Bill Jay and Johnnie Williamson and were both doing well when unfor- tunate injuries kept them on the sidelines for the season. Much credit should be given to managers Bill MacDonald, Currie Gardner and Harold Mills, who performed their thankless task nobly and are in a large way responsible for the complete success of the 1939 edition of our football team. Junior Football Season by TERRY BAMFORD Q FTER DAYS OF HARD PRAcT1s1Nc the Juniors developed into a hard battling squad, winning six of their ten games. The teams, flattened beneath the Blue and Silver were: S.A.C. 5-4 and 6-11-, Grove 10-3, Glen Lawrence 12-0, and the High School 10-6 and 5-2. Those who reversed the tables were, Forest Hill Village 12-0 and 3-1, Grove 7-3, and U.T.S. 8-1. lt was a season full of fun for everyone and Dick Mather and lan lVIacNeill should be congratulated for making it so. May future teams have just as much fun and success. A subsidiary of the Junior team was the Bantams. This squad which was composed of the younger members of the Juniors played three games and won them all. S.A.C. was beaten twice, 18-10 and 18-6. The High School was beaten once 17-0. These boys will be the real Junior team next year and we wish them a lot of luck. Junior Soccer For the little fellows who were not interested in ye gayme of footeballe, Mr. Harvey Ward kindly offered his experienced toe to direct the play in soccer. Several non-titular matches were run off with much grunting, pant- ing and a lot of fun. 50 THE VOYAGEUR The First Hockey Team 1940 by JACK BARTER THE FIRST TEAM got off to a flying start this year by defeating the Old Boys 7-4. The team seemed destined to go places under the able direction of coach Ron Perry, and while we had no outstanding stars, the boys worked well together and achieved much better results than were at first expected, winning 5, tieing 5 and losing 2 games. Early injuries put Captain Tommy Myers and Benny Taylor and Al Rogers out of the lineup for the remainder of the season. While the loss of these valuable members threw the team off-stride for a while, they came back with plenty of fight. The team and mangers wish to thank Mr. Perry for the time and effort he put into the team, and may he have champions in the years to come! fThanks should also be given to the managers who worked unceasingly towards the individual comforts of the team and which the writer modestly omitted.-Edd Coach's Comment by R. H. PERRY IN PLACE of the usual comments on the aptitudes of the team players we are going to make a few remarks on the squad as a whole. To begin with, we feel that it was a good season, not only because we more than held our own with the opposition, but also because the team exhibited characteristics which in the final analysis are more important than winning: co-operation, courage and love of the game. Notable characteristic of the team was an unwillingness to give in, which was demonstrated to good effect in the second Lakefield game. Undoubtedly the two hardest games of the season were with St. Andrew's College. As was the case last year, the two teams were evenly matched, with S.A.C. showing a burst of strength in the second encounter. We should like to thank lVlr. Joe Spillette and the operators of the local arena for their co-operation in the matter of rink arrangements. A word also about the ustuffw displayed by our ace Captain Tommy Myers, Bruce Taylor and Wally Guberman, who kept their chins up during the heavy going and kept them up long after the hockey season was over. So thanks a lot for a pleasant association. May you all keep up the drive and carry it over into whatever you undertake in the future. 51 THE VOYAGEUR rm fF'C'iiiilE15E'iWfruAM i , - 1940 Emcnseo Jmfcutwr ZGUBERMAN fusAoMAsTEnl M515 J.A.HALL SHARRIS l icoAcf-al I ' JA MCOMB i Q sz. PERKIN iwuumsou E 5.0 ROGE RS , , .IEA 3'?i'P,.wi KCAPTATNT Ln- 1 PICKERING FIRST TEAM- vs. Old Boys ..,.... St. Andrews Qakeiield ..........,........... University Schools ..... Qakefield ..........,..,......... Newmarket O.H.A. .... 4 452 periodsl University College St. Andrews ,.,.. .......... North Toronto Cl. .... . Qawrence Park Cl. ....... . T.C.S. ........ .... , Newmarket Bugle Band ....... .................................... Goals for : 49 Against : 45 52 Won Tied Won Tied Won Won Won .Lost Tied Tied Lost Tied 7 4 2 6 8 3 5 4 1 2 4 3 THE VOYAGEUR The Second Hockey Team by JIMMIE FROSST UR TEAM, as usual, was in a league with Sutton and Bradford. Our first game with Sutton resulted in a very closely contested game with Sutton coming out on top with the score 5-2 in their favour. The next game was with Bradford on their home ice. Pickering again came out on the wrong end of a 5-3 score. In this game Pickering did not play its best. The score was tied three all with but two minutes to Go. Pickering weakened and the other school scored twice. Ct After a few weeks of practise they engaged the St. Andrews 2nds in an exhibition game. The final score was a one all tie. The next game the seconds played was a return game with Bradford on our own ice. This time our team won by an 8-3 score. The league schedule was not completed this year due to circumstances beyond our control. The team joins with me in thanking Mr. Ward for the fine job he did in coaching and handling the team. The Seniors get away in the 220 53 THE VOYAGEUR 'A plcknni-Na coruzon FIRST B SKETBALL. EAM 1940 C.R.8LAGiSTOtK lcoacm LA. !RlON JT TTLE - U Senior Basketball by C. R. BLACKSTOCK NOT IN A LONG TIME have we had to rebuild a senior basketball team. At the beginning of the game season we had two members of the squad who had played regularly last year. Many of the players will not be back next year and for this reason there will not be an individual write-up of the players who were on the squad. The prospects for next season are good. There will be a number of good juniors coming up to the senior squad and these combined with the seniors who will be returning should give Pickering quite a good team again. Those on the squad this year gave of their best and we appreciate their effort and readiness to learn and work and to take defeats. Experience will give the returning players the needed balance and skill that goes to make a very good team. 54 THE VOYACEUR Junior Prep Team It was a good year for the Juniors HE JUNIOR TEAM started the season with high hopes of a winning season. Even the coach felt that there was little to hold them back. But good teams from both Upper Canada College and Forest Hill Village School, new entries in the Junior Prep Group, dashed -their hopes and pushed them into third position. Seldom has a school team been in so many close games, seldom has a school team lost so many games by such close margins. How- ever, the Juniors ended the season improving and we hope that the most of them will be back to join the returning seniors. Together they should give the College another smart senior basketball team. Intramurals OR THE SECOND YEAR the Intramural competitions were carried on throughout the year and the scores of the teams kept for the purpose of declaring the year winner. A great variety of games were included in the competitions even a new uscrewballi' game that tried the patience of some of the seniors. The scores were close for the most part until the Red team was badly hit by injuries to some of its leading athletes. The Blue and the Silver teams arrived at Sports Day very close together and the dayis com- petitions might have given the Blues the honours. The Silver were too strong onthe track to lose and ended the year for the second time on top. Team captains Harris, S. Henry and Macdonald did fine jobs of leading and directing their teams throughout the year and assisted greatly in making the off seasons of the year more interesting for the students so far as the sports programme of the school was concerned. 55 THE VOYAGEUR Skiing by BOB HENDERSHOTT AST SEASON,S SKI ACTIVITIES were probably the most successful in the history of the college. The sport was taken over by Coach Hodgetts, and under his guidance many new skiers first felt the thrill of this exhiliarat- ing pastime. Mr. Hodgetts gathered together a few of the more experienced skiers' and with their assistance set up a miniature ski school. Three or four afternoons a week were devoted to the teaching of younger students. Under this capable management these new skiers developd rapidly and showed a keen interest in the sport. The College ski team obtained the services of HChessw Edwards, well known instructor of the Toronto Ski Club. Mr. Edwards gave a few helpful talks on the subject and taught the experienced as well as the new skiers, the fundamentals of the sport. With his help a great deal of the ski schoolis work was automatically eliminated. These lessons seemed to be enjoyed by all who took part. The results were better than had been first anticipated, so, all in all the idea may be called a success. The skiers went up to Huntsville in February for a meet at Limberlost Lodge and made a remarkable showing, coming second to the boys from North Bay. Creed, J. Rankin, J. Frosst, C. Harvey and Hainright won places for Pickering. During the season some of the boys went with Coach Hodgetts to dif- ferent skiing meets around the country. Mr. Hodgetts, Creed, Laughton and Hendershott were the successful competitors from the college. er h TX y 4 Some of our Ski team at Limberlost 56 THE VOYAGEUR Archery by B. APPLE ARCHERY was rather slow in getting under way this year as a result of the long winter and the cloudy wet spring, but late as it was, I am sure everyone would like to extend their wholhearted congratulations to Mr. Maitland, our uFather of Archery, who has every year taught all his pupils the many tricks of the long bow. The big triumph was when Pickering invaded U.C.C. on the day of the triangle track meet, and emerged victorious. A few days later the School had the pleasure of entertaining Forest Hill Village School at an archery tournament which the School won after a long and fierce struggle. On Sports Day, June 1, the competition was hard fought, and to the accompaniment of applause from parents and bystanders, archery for the 1940 Spring term was brought to a close. ioioioioioioioioiogogoiniwio bioiiogngngnioiozogoioioi 1 1 I The :Q E Compliments of Newmarket 5 in FTJ c Ltd g i e . . ames 0. . i ToRoNTo PASTEURIZED MILK i Wh I I d, t ,b t f 0 OCSRC IS I'l ll0l'S 0 PRQDUCTS i g quality Fish Products ,P g Q Beacon Brand i ! Smoked Fish THISTLE BRAND i i O O 0 BUTTER Q u ! ' Superchill g , 'I' i Fresh Fish Phone 252 i Fiuets D I g C0l0Q0l0l0Q0i0QOQ i i lOQKO:0, OZQJQ i l l 1 1 l0i0l l l l0Q lCOQOQOQQ0l0l0lllQQ0l0llllilll0l1lillfii Qompliments of Geo. Williams i0i0l0ll!l0l0l0llDl l0l0l0l l l l l 1 1 i l l ll i0Q 57 THE VOYAGEUR Track and Field by EUGENE ON YSCHUK IN ANTICIPATION or sPoRTs DAY and the Triangle Meet which is held every year in the middle of lVlay the school began training shortly after the Clee Club show had rung down its curtain for the last time. They made the most out of the disagreeable weather and by the tenth of lVlay were practically ready to take on all comers. When Wednesday, May 15 rolled around we were ready to find out just what we had in the way of track and field athletes. Lawrence Park C.l. was up for the afternoon to attempt in its turn to find out its strength and to compare it with ours. The first of the afternoon was quite agreeable and everything rolled smoothly-even young T.T. fTwo Toni Brooke who did a good job with the public speaking system. Towards the end of the meet signs of rain were visible but we managed to pull through the meet without getting too wet. It was the first time that a meet, other than the lntra-lVlural, has been held on our small compact track. There were no records broken. We managed, in the end, to beat out Lawrence Park by a decisive margin. Now that we had a better idea of our various skills at this sport we started to prepare ourselves for the much more difficult grind at the Tri- angle lVleet held with Upper Canada College and Northern Vocational on the Upper Canada track on May 21. All went well until the day of the meet. Some of the boys were a bit nervous but got over their feelings of timidity as soon as the meet started. Sir Wm. Mulock and Headmaster at xxx Sports' Day Captains Le Brocq fSilverj Guberman fliedl Onyschuk fldluel 58 THE VOYAGEUR The Triangle Meet was quite a success, even though we trailed both Northern and U.C.C., with about twenty points separating the first and third place teams. The afternoon was ideal for track and field and we were well supported on the sidelines. Pickering managed to break three records at this meet, the junior High Jump when Jimmie Frosst cleared 5' QM , the Junior Shot Put with Bill Maresch hurling the sphere 43' 3M g and the Junior Shuttle Relay. Jimmie Frosst also tied the Intermediate High Jump record. 9 Sports Day LIMATICALLY, it was warm with showers. Athletically it was an enthusi- astic affair with a couple of records threatened but not broken. Sociallv, there was a fair turnout, with a number of students and Old Boys staying for the popular tea dance in the gymnasium. Competitively, the Silver and Blue Teams fought out neck and neck, with the former finally nosing ahead by a margin of a few points. Athletic Banquet HIS YEAR,S CLOSING DINNER, as is the custom, did honour to those students who had participated faithfully throughout the year in team, intra- mural and individual athletic pursuits. To cheer them on their way Chair- man Blackstock invited Messrs. uHap Day, coach of the Toronto Maple Leaf Hockey Team, Syl Apps, great centre player of the same team, and HHec Creighton, well known lnterprovincial Football referee. Other events of the evening were the announcing of the newly called Widdrington Award, and the Carratt Cane. The former was shared by John Cooper, John Hall, Van Laughton and Ed. Creed. Double Garratt Cane winners were John Hall and Van Laughton. To perpetuate the evening's programme, Boy Dilworth, sports' announcer for CBL, made a record of the highlights. This was later heard over the air on a regular evening's broadcast. DAY - NIGHT - CORRESPONDENCE Established nearly half a century 12 SCHOOLS IN TORONTO Shaw Courses are carefully planned Courses, leading to recognized standing. Individual atten- tion in Complete Oiice Trainingg Accountancy, Secretarial Instructiong Bookkeepingg Shorthandg Typewritingg Stenotypy. Shaw Model Office gives practical experience. Shaw Employment Bureau gives Free assistance to graduates. Join any time. HEAD QFPICE Write to Head Office for Catalogue, 1130 BAY ST., TORONTO gf Phgne KI, 59 PDOi0liilllMMl0li lQ0lllllllll1ll0 THE VOYAGEUR llllllQll0ill0Ql0Cf Skill Counts No matter what game you play, good equipment will increase your effectiveness. -I SPORTING GOODS CO. JACK WATSON Pickering College Staff 1939-40 J. MCCULLEY, B.A. lTor.l, B.A. 1Oxonb Headmaster. R. E. K. ROURIQE. B.A. lQueen'si, lXl.A lHarvard,i, Mathematics, Asst. Head master. TAYLOR STATTEN, Vocational Guidance. R. H. PERRY, B.A. lTor.l, M.A. lCOlum hiai, Geography. A. M. CHIPMAN. B.A. lAcadiab. M.B.A. lHarvardJ, Business. J. W. HOLMES. B.A. lW6St6l'I1i, M.A. lTor.l, English lLeave of absencei. A. B. HODGETTS. B.A. lTor.l, History. H. M. BEER. B.A. lTor.i, Moderns. F. D. L. STEWART, B.A. lTor.i, English. C. R. BLACKSTOCK, Physical Education. B. A. W. JACKSON. B.A. lMcMasterl, Eng lish and History. R. G. COLCROVE. B.A., B.Paed. lTor.i Mathematics. H. L. WARD, B.A. lTor.i, Classics. G. T. THOMAS, B.A. lWesternJ, Science. E. R. lx'lATHI-IR, Typing and Shorthand. S. W. KING. B.S.A. fO.A.C.l, Agriculture. J. A. BTAITLAND, Manual Arts and Crafts. HUGH BUCHANAN, IAN MACNEIL, Tutors. RUDY RENzIUs, A. HILTS, Creative Arts. CLIFFORD POOLE, A.T.C.M., Music. MRs. R. B. GREEN, Librarian. Miss F. S. ANCIENT, Matron. Miss IRENE NICCULLEY, Dietitian. R. B. GREEN. Bursar. DR. J. M. BARTON, Examining Physician. DR. G. E. CASE, Resident Physician. MRs. E. F. STREETER, MIss M. M. RICHARDSON. Miss V. A. THOMPSON, Secretarial Staff. THE VOYAGEUR li0l0i 1c0j0 lbgrioi ici i 11101 ici 1 101 g ! Q l film, Bmdlaql ' i ! i ! i ' CE ' ll ' i 1' t 2 i ' ' 7 Adelaide St. E. EL. 9855 in . 9 i We cater for banquets and part1es ! C S Q large and small l 91 Ve us 2 i -P -P Q i 5 i ' Good Food - Well Cooked Q Nicely Served. ! i ! Q u U A i0QOQ Q0l0l0l0Q0l0l 'i l0QKO:Q gt.0i0l0l l -itil lfill lOl 1 l0Q Q0l0l0QOQ010l0l0Ql lQOQ0l0lOl0i0l0i0l0101010l0l0l0l0i0l01 Complimenls Q0l0l0Q0i0i0l0l0C10Q0l0Qlillll0l0l0l0i0i0l0l0l0l0llll0l0l01 lQ0i0i0Q0l0l0QOQ01D0i0I0l0i0l0l0l0l0l0l0i0l0l0lfilillfillllfli compnmems of VICTOR SHOE REPAIRS Q0i0l0l0l010QOQ0l0QOQ0i0i0l0l0l0l0'l0l0i0lLJllll0'i4Dl0i4ll0l C 101 i ioioioioioj 1 ioiniibb b:0D10l0l0i0i0i0l0l0i0l0i0i0i Call and See Q ALEC'S KING GEORGE HOTEL Q Q Jr I Q BARBER SHOP i Q 2 4 S. GIBNEY, PROP. Q NEWMARKET Q u I 3 0Q0 lO i010 'l0i0QK 0:0 fx. !l0lCll0llDi0l0ll3i0l0i0i43l0Qf 61 JlOl010l0l0l0iOQOl010l0QOQOQ0i0i0l0l0-Ol0l0QOQOQOQ010 ifiiiil l0l010i0i0l0Q0l0l0I0l0l0ll'll0i0l0Q0l0l i0Q Q Q 010l010i01OH0'0l0l0QOQOQ0i0l0l0l0l0l0l0i0l0l0l0l0l Q THE VOYAGEUR Newmarket Wholesale 2 REGISTERED i A. E. JARVIS, PROPRIETOR i CIGARS, CIGARETTES, E TOBACCO AND CONFECTIONERY i PHONE 206 NEWMARKET 2. BILL WHITE'S 5 RED INIDIAN SERVICE Q STATION Q COMPLETE SERVICE TO THE ! MOTORIST Eagle St. Ph. 469 NEWMARKET i i Radio Service StCWH1't BCHITC NEWMARKET HAVE YOUR NEW SUIT INDIVIDUALLY HAND-CUT AND TAILORED FOR YOU - - AND ONLY ' YOU! TIP TOP TAILORS LTD. 62 THE VOYAGEUR - rioioioi 1 10101 1 1 101 iii 301101 1 1 cnoioi as 1 1 1 1 . i ! Complzments of 5 Compliments g A Q U H. L U C K E of FRESH MEATS Q , , and g 5 Riddell S ROSS OARADONNA i FRUITS Sz VEGETABLES Q ' i C B I4 i ! ' i ! . i ! i ! Main St. i Q i ' NEWMARKET NEWMARKET, ONTARIO Q i I i0,0i0-0QOQ0l0iOQ0lOl0QKO:4Q Ozvllii ifil l0Q Q 1 l0Q 1 1 Q01 QOQOQOQOK0l0QOQOQOD0l0i l0i0i0QO10i0i0l0i0l0l0l 1 VALCLOSE KENNELS COCKER SPANIELS - WIRE TERRIERS OLD ENGLISH SHEEPDOGS All of Championship Stock PUPPIES FOR SALE OUR PRICES ARE REASONABLE AND ATTRAOTIVE We will appreciate your fifnquiries. North Main Street NEWMARKET, ONTARIO - CANADA 63 iOI0l0i0i010l0 l0l0l0 lOl THE VOYAGEUR D O O 9 Q0l0Q0l0?f3Q0l0l0i0Q0i0QOQ1 .gf 'OilQ0l0Q0l0l0l0l0-0l0i0l0l0Q o 0 TRIANGLE GARAGE 5 i GENERAL MOTORS Q ! Sales SL SCIVICC AND ' A ' SPECIALIZING : i CHEVROLET Sz OLDSMOBILE A i - YONGE and EAGLE STREETS ! i NESFBITT MOTORS NEWMARKET ! PHONE 197 U i NEWMARKET R E I R S T O A L L M A S O F ' .a.0l0l0QOQ0 i0l0l0l0l0i ifia C A R S i 6 gli? 0 0 0 0 Ol OQOQOQOQOQ EXPERT WORKMANSHIP U ! G. w. LAT-1-A Phone O ' Proprietor Klngsdale 0062' All Work Fully Guaranteed ! i g A PANORAMIC GAS, OIL and GREASE Q PHOTOGRAPHY CO. AT ! i We take Photographs Anywhere in Canada Refreshments and Ice Cream Cogrsgggonzihdcglilsrgfes vgiidlgikciiilyly Tobaccos and Cigarettes g i Picture Frames to Order O All Work Guaranteed Prompt Delivery Ph 566, d 202W11 O Ones an ! 67 Madison Ave. Toronto 5 n RGGER l0l01G i0l0i0l0Q010i0QJO:l gig Dl0l0l0l0QOQOQOQ0l0l0Q0i0Q 0101 l0l0Q Q0l0l0l0l 1 Q l0Qf - MAJESTIC The Leading Radio HARDWARE PAINTS GILS VARNISHES SMITH HARDWARE PHONE 39 i0i0Q0llll0QiQl-l 64 010i02OQQQlili0l1l10l 101010103 101 oioio101oiu1oio1oi1 T 3 1 1 3 3030393 1 1 10101 THE VOYAGEUR Ol0lil!lQ0l0l0l0i0l0l0l0l0l0lllilii 1 l l l0lCOzO AFTER scHooL 2 OR AFTER THE sHoW E ! EoR A TASTY BITE OR cooL DRINK A WELCOME AWAITS YOU g AT g i Cousins MILK BAR Cousins i ...,.,.,...,...,...,..,..,..,..,-.,-.,-.,...,...,-.,...,-.,-.,-.,.. ...,-0-0-.,..s-.,-.,...i. MACNAB ' 2 Dr. R L. HEWTTT Q i mmm 5 Electric, Coal, Wood Mccauley Block E s NE KilXR2KET Opposite Post Office 2 f .0-..-0-0-0-0-0-0-0-0-0-E.. NEWMARKET, ONTARIO i 'I' 'P R. Osborne Sz Son Plumbing and Tinsmithing E 1 I 1 A11 I I Joh Work o Specialty E + 'P 'P Phone 87 Phones 269-W. Res. 269-M I NEWMARKET, ONT. Q 65 V 0.1 THE VOYAGEUR zblifll0i0i0l0Q0i0l0i0i0l0Q0lC OEODQOQ Q QOQOQUQOQOQ QQ, Q Q ' LAURA SECORD'CANDfIES i C0mpl,mwntS SODA BAR CModernJ ! ! WEBSTER MOTORS , REXALL ! THE BEST DRUG STORE Art Stephens Q J. C. BEST, Phm.B. Shen Products ! PRESCRIPTION SPECIALIST U We Deliver EAGLE ST. NEWMARKET i Phone 14 Newmarket, Ont. bioioi i 3010101050103 ioioiwi 'g., Qo,o:o,o:o- 1 illiffiiii 5 Compliments of nsureu' S E 3 3 C ! WESTINGHOUSE RADIO See y ! LOCAL LLP-LLL Bill Mclntyre Q T. E. MCMULLEN Insufanfe Agency ! 01' Q COR' MALf,,ff,'Xgf,TER STS' Q Fire-Llfe'CaSualty Phone 538 8 Eagle St. 0l0I0l0l0l0l0l0iOl0l0iOl0l0l0Q0l0l0l Every house needs Westinglzozrse 'Q0l i0Q0l 1 QUQOQOQOQ0i0QlO:Ql Q o 01084 '50 no 922 EEE :wig zz -eng' -I- Building Supplies -I- General Contracting QQi1QQili'Qi10QlO:Q1 V it 0.0 Newmarket, Ont. 3 0,0 I is 12 ililibi 0 QOQOQOQOQOQOQOQC . iii 1 l0l0l l0l0QOQOQOCOQ I I lt is, as I have said. Sir, a small eollege, but there are those who lore if. Salute from THE NEWMARKET ERA 1852 It is, as I have said, Sir, a Small paper, but there are those who read fit. g:gOili1iliQOQQOii0Q 0QOQ0l i Q il THE VOYACEUR -1 QOQOQ Q l0Q0l0QOH0l i0Q Q :O IPE.PQ0i0i0l0l0l0l0l ltilfiitillli Geer SL By ers Q General Cartage 5 f' ' A and Moving ! LBJ 'I' IMI Fon ALL PURPOSES ' MLS? o L, .... ne- II 3 I III -1- MJ ,I Farm Equipment wk SL '+L lL ,.,n, , Q MAPLE LEAF Frost Fence Q c7g,,y,g,,,,,4f- I O If you would like a copy of our 52 PHONE 68 ! page reference book, write to NEWMARKET ONT. I Canada Packers Lt-d. Dept. C. QOQ0l0Q0l - l i0l0i0i i i Roadhouse Sl Rose FURNITURE AND HOUSE FURNISHINGS 'I' NEWMARKET i010i0l010l0l0l0l0i0i 019 Compliments of BUDD STUDIO Photographers NEWMARKET PHONE 431 H o 'S o 5 FF o I ! I o I e I o I o I I I I I c I I aio 0:0110 ., I o I o I c I o I c I c I c I I e I c I C I I o 6 0: O30 01 101010 i i i i '5 4' - C O Pei R010 i i i i i i 0101010 3 9,1010 6010101 i i al i i i i l0iOQ0l0l0l0l0l0QOQ0l0 UI.angIey's Ltd. CanadIa'S Master Cleaners 24-HOUR SERVICE ON GENTS' SUITS RING 139 SPILLETTE'S Opposite P.O. NEWMARKET 'IQUQ l0l0l0i0Q0l0l0l0l i0Q BELIJS DRUG STORE QNext to Post Office! QUALITY MERCHANDISE PHOTO FINISHING Phone 209 Newmarket Ontario I HE VOX AGEUR PRINTERS SCHOOL BOOKS CATALOGUES FOLDERS PUBLISHERS GENERAL PRINTING Mundy-Goodfellow Printing COMPANY LIMITED 37 MCCAUL STREET TORONTO, ONT. AD 1 0106 68 THE VOYAGEUR YOU CAN BE SURE OF ELL . . . IT'S SEALED C. IDDY MIDDLEIBIDOUIY, DIQUD. Mulock's Corner We cater to everybody SLEIGHING AND ALL KINDS OF PRIVATE PARTIES ARRANGED. REFRESHMENTS SERVED AT ANY HOUR. DANCING TO WURLITZER. OPEN EVERY EVENING TILL 12.00 O'CLOCK There's always something doing at Roy's DDOQ Q i0Q0l0QOQ0 l0i0Q0l0l0l0l0l0 i0 itll! l0i0l0l0i0QOQOIOQ1 l,0iillQllQli0l0l1 Compliments of The Eglinton Veterinary Hospital C. L. MCGILVRAY VETERINARIAN 183 EGLINTON AVENUE WEST TORONTO V O80 i i i i i l0l0COQfli0l0l0QlYQlO:'j H. C. BURTON 81 CO. WESTINGHOUSE MAZDA LAMPS INDUSTRIAL 81 MINING SUPPLIES 76 Wellington St. W. AD. 7464-65 TORONTO HAMILTON SWASTIKA gg rioioioioioioi 1o THE VOYACEUR R AD ERTI ER Page Page Page ACk1'0.Vd'S S9l'ViC9 Sta- ----- 14 Langle-y's Ltd., Cleaners .. 67 Riddell's Bakery ......... 63 Ad21fn'S Bavbel' S'h0v -- 70 Loogmuii- Paint Co. ....... 12 Ridpoths Ltd. ...... 10 Alec's Restaurant ......... 61 Larwayl Temple gl Coopopu Roadhouse gl Rose, Furnl, AU1'01'a Building CO- ---- 66 Little, J.O., Coal .---.----- ture .................... 67 Bamford, James and Son. 9 Luck gl Cm-adonna, Meats, Rogers Elias Coal C0 U 5 Bearer Stewart. Radios 52 Fflllt .................... Rogel.-Majestig Radio . i BQIVS Drug Store ........ MacDonald, George 83 CQ.. W Buqin S h I '..'. ,9 B9St Drug 575019 -'--' -- 66 Macnab Hardware Co. .... S.la A, . C 005 D Bu-ko-Ellis-Ryi-ie ...... -. 10 Moiioboi- Costume co. ..... Evefwoo S my ----- - 61 Buddis Photo ..... Mal-Shall Mattress Cb, .i .c Slrppsonv Robert a CO' - 1 Burton, H. C. 8z Co. ..... 69 Mal-.Wood Motors ,,,. Skltch, Harry 8: Co., Clothes 13 Canada Packers Ltd. ...... 67 Mclntyl-9 Insurance H Smith Hardware ,,,,,, 64 C0l1SiHS Dairy ----------- - 65 McMaster University ....... Spillette, Joe, Tobacconist . 67 Cl'99d'S St01'a29 VaUltS ----- 8 McMullen Electric .... .... S tewayt, J, F, Mu Broker. 5 DaCk'S Sl'109S Ltd- --------- 'll Middlebrook Service Sta. .. Strand Theatre .......... 0 14 Davis 85 Henderson -- ' 4 Miller Lltl l0gI'2lDhlI1g' CO. .. Thompson 8 Davis L9atll91' CO- - -- 4 Morrison's Men's Wear .... T- T ,Il .1 ' 62 'Dixon P9lHCil CO. --------- 3 Mundy-Goodfellow Printing 11? Op al oils ' Dominion Bank ..--------- 7 Co. ........... . .......... Trfaflgle Servlce Sta' -'-- ' 64 Eaton, T., Co. ........... 72 Neilson, William gi Co, l TI'l'llltY -C0ll9g9 -.-.--.-.-- 2 Edwards, A. E., Class Pins 12 Back Cover University of Western On- Eglinton Veterinary Hosp.. 69 Nesbltt Motors llllll , llllll tario .................. . 3 Ellen Bradley Grill ....... 61 Newmarket Dail-y CO, ,,,, Valclose Kennels ......... 63 Eves 8: Duncan, Cleaners---15 Newmarket Era Printing Co. Victor Shoe Repairs 61 EXDI'9SS Harald, Printing . 15 Newmarket Wholesale C'o... Violet Flower Shop ....... 12 FOPSCY. Pag9 3X Si399l9 11 Office Specialty Co. ........ Wagg's Steam Laundry 71 Geer KL Byf-IFS. Cartage 67 Osborne Sz Sons, Tinsmiths Watson, Jack, Sporting Globe and Mail ....------- 7 Panoramic Photography Co Goods ................... 60 Gray C0aCl1 LiI'19S --------- 10 Parkes, McVittie 8z Shaw Webster Motors ........... 66 Hewitt, Dr. R- L., Den'fiSt 65 Ltd. ........ . ............ 13 White, Bill, Service Sta... 62 Il11D91'ial Bank ------------- 6 Patterson's Drug Store .... 15 Whyte Packing Co. ......... 9 James, F. T., Sz CO., FI'uitS 57 Perrin's Florist ............ 14 Willard's Chocolates ....... 62 Ki-Hg G'901'g9 H0t9l Bal'b91 Queen's University .... 2 Williams, Geo. C. ...... .. 57 Shop .................... 61 Rexall Drugs ....... 11 Wilson, Harold A. 8: Co... 70 5:07-0Q0i0Q0aOQOHOQOQOQOQOQUQC 0? .:Ola0Q0i0QOCOQOQ0,0QOQUi0Q'-7:1 fr. ' ! Q I I l FINE CARS l l Swing with the Crowd Dodge - DeSoto ' Guaranteed Chrysler-Service for 2 Safe Driving. Only Genuine Parts Used. MARWOOD MOTORS North Main st. Phone 425 NEWMARKET I I C 0l0l0Q 5? 01 l I li ea' li cr' cz l:D'l'iS5 ii SW im wg are i E. H. ADAMS BARBER SHOP SOFT DRINKS genius ioioioioioioioioiojoioicop E ! l Wilson Q Sport ! Supplies I ! HIGH SCHOOL SPORT EQUIPMENT ' OUR SPECIALTY Get Your Recreation from- BASEBALL - ARCHERY - TENNIS v FOOTBALL - GOLF - LACROSSE ! Send for Catalogue of the Sport that ' you are interested in. ! The HAROLD A. WILSON I COMPANY LIMITED Q 299 YONGE sr. TORONTO OIQ lQ0l0l0i0l0i0 THE VOYACEUR QOQOQ0l0l0l0l0i0l0l0llllfliiliiilllii!lf!ltl1010l0l0l0l0l0i0itlil Dack's Bond Street Line Q FOR YOUNG MEN Mail orders jilled Write for catalogue You can't beat Dack's Shoes for quality and value. They give you cushioned comfort - longer wear-and the authentic styling you want. See the newest models in Dack's Bond Street line. SHOPS IN PRINCIPAL CANADIAN CITIES Q0l0i0i0Q0i0QOl0Q0l0l0i0l0l0iO-0l0i0i0i0iOll 'OXODQOQ Q Q Q 1 I Q QfiiOli!-0l9Q0l0i0i0l0l0l0i i l i i 10i0lf WAGG'S i LAUNDRY and DRY CLEANERS, Limited WORKS AT MIDLAND AND ORILLIA 0 We Are As Near To You As Your Telephone Q o BARRIE MIDLAND ORILLIA 1381 800 723 ililoildl l 1 Oi .0,0QOQ0lQllQllll010l0lllill 71 C O20 Ollll 101 1010 010:45 iq The Winning Combination... And both the tweed jacket and the flannel slacks were imported from England for our Prep Clothes Shop. From now right through Fall you'll find smart out- fits such as these wherever Well dressed young lads meet. The lined jackets are from Barran's of England. In brown, blue-green and tan. Sizes 12 to 17 years. Eaton price, Each 7.95, others priced to 16 50. These English grey worsted flannel slacks need no belt. . . they have extension waist-band, expand- able straps at sides, adjustable with buttons. 11 to 18 years. Each 6.75 1 English Kantabs Trousers, pair 7.50. The Prep Clothes Shop MAIN sTonE sEcoNn moon AFT. N CQMITED TORONTO CANADA 'N 72 5. ,XX - ' X S':Xw'5, l' 'x ' ' :Q fi fi',g'lvi1', 7 ,. ff-M LZ- V: 'gif-' ,X , I , 'RW ' ' H ' ' V I .X XX: XX XX- 'X X1 ff., fe XX'X XX .X , z-NJ ,di I I I 'X ? ' 'K X g, A l K f yi V1 qi ' 'kr ' W. 'lf ii? :q??g1.'i,1 I If rffixlf' I 'Q . NX Q ' , JJ: X ,- lx ' I Y' 1 I 2 , v X z 1 I ' , X X ', ' 1 - ' u In alfa? j'f'f'ff'.,vf'p'J4'f'N 9, X X41 X' Q x ' 'X' ' vu? ,'f g ' 'yiffk I ' . , . . X in, 3 ,Y ., 1 Ll . l M . ok- Q .T - . . N. .U ' . ,, . .. .l A v I , 4 I X . u , . I A . , W.. K. ll W . I 1 I, . I . . ' , - 9 f r . . , - ,v. 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