Selwyn House School - Yearbook (Montreal, Quebec Canada)

 - Class of 1941

Page 20 of 46

 

Selwyn House School - Yearbook (Montreal, Quebec Canada) online collection, 1941 Edition, Page 20 of 46
Page 20 of 46



Selwyn House School - Yearbook (Montreal, Quebec Canada) online collection, 1941 Edition, Page 19
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Page 20 text:

SELWYX HOUSE SCHOOL MAGAZINE of twenty-one gets military training, and every ofiicer must serve in the ranks. This is an excellent idea if it is enforced, and I am sure it will be. Ammunition factories have been springing up all over Canada. These factories are making a variety of ammunition, from bombs to machine-gun bullets. Almost all the automobile companies have stopped making cars and are making war equipment. Britain needs more and more ammunition. Another thing must be remembered, to enable the government to open factories, buy planes, and war equipment, the Canadian people must be ready to sacrifice unnecessary luxuries. A ninety percent tax on cars that the manufacturer claims are worth over twelve hundred dollars has been put on. Also a luxury tax has been put on almost all unnecessary things. The duty on articles coming from the States is going up, while the duty on those coming from England is going down. We must buy British made goods. Another effort that must be mentioned is that of War Savings stamps and certi- ficates. The response of the Canadian people has been magnificent. Thousands of people buy War Savings Certificates regularly. If people will give money for those YYar Savings Certificates, Britain's victory will be even surer. A. C., Form 5. Zliarantn. The men o' war of Ro1ne'.f oft :-annfedjleel La-r .fheltered off Taranfo, gre-v and neaf, The men not dreaming ,soon wifh deadli- hum, Like beef, the Brilifh bombing planes would rome. Their fhozzghtx were no! of war, but of the peare fy' thoxe at home in Rome, fllilan, or .Yiceg B141 even then on them if did no! dawn That peare from their home town.: had long been gone. Bu! .toon their lhozzghtx were mrned from home to fear Qf trhaf lhe-v knew .fo be .fo serv near, For our of rloudf abo:-e lhem, one by one, Di:-ed Skzzax... Fnlmarx... death from ou! the .mn .' .ind when the eount -was taken laler on, Thevvfonnd lhat hay lheirjieel below had gone, .1'nd many of their .fhipx .fo fell lhe blow That for many month.: to .tea the-v could not go. A. M., Form 4. 1Submcrsas nares detiet Dux iste Tnrenti, Culmina sed Pindi Graecia fortis hahet E I - Ed. l13l

Page 19 text:

FOR THE SCHOOL YEAR 19-10-19-11 moured cars and many others. The Dodge Company of Canada is making Red Cross ambulances to enable them to carry on their services to soldiers who are wounded. They are also making light trucks for the army. A little while ago I saw a parade fthe invasion of Montreal WJ with all the types of Canadian trucks shown. These trucks are made to take it. They are made without the slightest unneccessary weight. The Ford Trucks only, to show their make, have a little blue X39 above the radiator. The mudguards are well above the wheels to prevent stones from being caught between the wheel and mud- guard. They are very sturdy trucks. Another thing I noticed at the parade was the many sizes and kinds of trucks, from large trucks that would carry about one hundred men down to little ones carrying only four men. Two new kinds of army trucks have been introduced by the Ford Company. One is a little one with the controls on the English side ofthe truck. It had a canvas back like a big truck, which could shelter about four men. In the cab were two men, the driver and his assistant. 'I This car was equipped with radio. Its instructions could be received either by the driver or the assistant by means of earphones. These trucks will be very useful for Britain. The second truck was a rather large one and carried about twenty-live men. It was entirely made of steel. There was a sentry in the truck 3 he was standing in the truck, but his head and shoulders were above the truck. He would have either a camera or field-glasses. This truck is very cleverly constructed. I think the motor-cycles of the Canadian army should all be of the same make and that make should be B.S.A. The motor-cycle division in Quebec use Harley- 3 Davidsons, while those in Ontario use Ariel and B.S.A. The motor-cycles used in Ontario are all made in England, but those in Quebec are all made in the Cnited States. I think that in England, where the motor-cycles are going to be used most, B.S.A. motor-cycles would stand up the best. The British Army uses them, why don't we F There is probably a very good reason that I don't know, but to me it seems we ought to use B. S. A's and Ariels. Canada is already starting to build aeroplanes for Britain. Fairchild and Vickers, just outside Montreal, are making them. Vickers makes the parts and Fairchild assembles them, and the finished product is called Fairchild. We are making Hurricanes , Hamp- dens , and many others. Making planes is one of the most valuable services we can ever render to Britain. Britain is making many freighters to replace those lost in convoys, so Canada is making torpedo-boats for her. VYe are not building any really big boats for her, but cor- vettes and torpedo-boats are almost as valuable. These torpedo boats Csome ot' them? can attain a speed of sixty miles per hour. They are quite easily made Cin comparison with destroyersl, and are very valuable to Britain. YYhere I stayed this summer boats for the Royal Canadian Air Force were being made, they were testing these boats on the lake, and they were very interesting to watch. Training camps have been erected all over Canada to train men for the army, navy and air-force. Camp Borden is the chief one. There is a new camp being built just over the Victoria Bridge. The National Registration Act was a very good idea, as the government knows the age of the men and women Cover sixteenl in Canada. Every man l17I



Page 21 text:

FOR THE SCHOOL YEAR 1940--19-Il jfrum the ifuniur Qtbnnl. A 'I'RI'lr1 STORY I once saw a cottage of thatch: I knocked and lifted the latch: :Ks I went through the rooms, Is your roof made of brooms I , I asked in that cottage of thatch. J. C., Form B. I WONDER P W'ho knows where a monkey goes F Cp a tree: W'ho knows where a man with a telescope goes 7 Out to sea: W'ho knows where I go ? No one but me I T. P., Form B. SCRIPTURF, FORM C. fllirs ---- . W'hat happened when the priests walked round and round Jericho ? .111.fu'e1'.' They got dizzy I Q Besrriptiun of an Earthquake. The hot summer sun beats down mercilessly on the human body in the old Turkish town of Kastamuni. The old twisty streets are lined with crooked white houses, while swarming people shop at quaint booths which display the usual goods. The people perform their daily duties in utter oblivion of the approaching disaster. Suddenly the chosen moment comes. A shock runs through the small town of Kastamuni, and the big Mosque on the northern side of the town crumbles to the ground like a pack of cards. In its place arises a column of dust some hundred feet in height, while other surrounding buildings crash to the ground leaving the same tell-tale mark of disaster. Terrorized people rush out of wavering houses. W'omen and children shriek in the streets. Men rush to stricken buildings and pull out mangled friends and relations from under piles of debris. Others simplify matters by fainting. A terrorized horse and cart rushes riderless by. A second shock succeeds the firstg more houses are shattered to the ground, including the power-house, which rocks for a few seconds before it falls to the earth, making matters worse for the coming night by hindering the salvage work, for the town will be plunged into darkness. Luckily it is summer, and the days are long. How- ever, that shock is the last, and people have more time to devote their attention to others than their own family, which has naturally been their sole thought during the earthquake. Meanwhile on seismographs all over the world the earthquake has been recorded, and reporters are on their way to take pictures of the calamity, which has so sorely shaken the little town of Kastamuni. J. C. S. P., Form 3.-X. l19l

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