Trafalgar Castle School - Yearbook (Whitby, Ontario Canada)

 - Class of 1923

Page 27 of 92

 

Trafalgar Castle School - Yearbook (Whitby, Ontario Canada) online collection, 1923 Edition, Page 27 of 92
Page 27 of 92



Trafalgar Castle School - Yearbook (Whitby, Ontario Canada) online collection, 1923 Edition, Page 26
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Page 27 text:

vox C ' OLLEGII 25 His Majesty. She then entered politics, and by her influence in the Agnes Mc- Phail Uplift Society for the supremacy of women in the home, she had the law passed against women washing dishes and a contraband placed on grape wine that would pop the cork more than two feet in the air. In her old age she turned her atten- tion to gardening, raising garlic and angle worms. Her contributions to botany, zoology and cookery brought about thereby has baen one of the rea- sons she has gone down in history as one of the greatest benefactresses of her age. Marjorie Speers One Sunday morning 1 was motoring into the country and passing through a little village was attracted by the beauty of the chimes of a nearby church. My time was my own so T went into the church for the service. After a few minutes a tall, sweet- looking lady entered the church, follow- ed by seven small boys. They occu- pied the front pew, so I was able to watch them closely. The children were remarkably well behaved and took the g-reatest interest in the music. As I was leaving the church someone addressed me and I turned to see at my side the aforesaid lady, who to my sur- prise should be none other than Marj. Speers. She urged me to come to her home for lunch, and I was glad to do so. After lunch, when the little boys were all having their nap, or at least suppos- ed to be having it, and Marj. had wash- ed the dishes (she wouldn ' t tolerate a maid, as she enjoyed domestic ' activi- ties so much) she told me what great changes had been made in her plans of 0. L. C. days. She said that after graduating from O.L.C. she had gone abroad to study for concert work. Her masters had predicted a brilliant future for her but social successes had interf?red and so diverted her attention that she gave up her career and returned home. She could not decide which of her many suitors she prefei ' red so she gave up all thought of marriage. As her father and mother were both dead now, she was very lonely, so she determined to adopt a child. However, all the children who came in answer to her advertisement were so attractive that again she could not choose, but this time she took them all, and all boys. She told me the children ' s names, a few of which were familiar. This co- incidence was explained by the fact that she had called them in memory of her rejected suitors, some whos3 names I had often heard at O.L.C. She was very amliitious for one little boy, in- tending him to go to S.P.S. and be a civil engineer when he grew up. She kept herself young and fit by swimming in her private tank and Dy riding horse-back. She taught the little boys herself and all but one had won his l ronze. Marj. seemed very contented and judging by the order with which tilings ran. had retained all her old skill of managing. No doubt someday she will be very proud of her adopted children, and certainly the name ' Speers ' will not soon be extinct. Grace Moodie It was the year 1943 and I had just returned to Toronto from foreign coun- tries, where I had been been doing Bac- teriological research work. I left the new Union Station which had just been opened and decided to go up to Eaton ' s, as I needed some elastic and a few other trifles. Arriving at Eaton ' s, imagine my sur- prise to find only a two story budding in place of the large fine structure I had known. I went in and learned that the de- partment I wanted was on the second floor. T ' he-e weve now no elevators ny ( colat; rs and one had to u e the stnirs. Tlie articles were poor and

Page 26 text:

24 VOX COLLEGII mare just because of a grape-nut inul- ding. Jean Lennox Aiid this, said tlie rubher-iiecK man as he flourished his big horn, This is where the famous Jean Len- nox first studied vocal. Necks imme- diately elongated that their owners niiglit view the massive building and tlie statue of the famous prima donna as the gyroplane sped past. This college is the famous 0. L. C. of which you have heard, no matter from what part of the world you came. The most famous of its graduating clas- ses was 1923. Miss Lennox, as she was before she started her series of sen- ational elopements and siibsequent di- vorces, graduated in M.E.L. She fully demonstrated her powers as her first husband testified on the witness stand. It is to him she owes her first success in opera. In the apartment house in which they lived also lived a vocal professor. He was so astounded by the volume and tone she produced when she called Henry! that he induced her to start Henry-ing as a business. Thus her start in opera. While singing at the Metropolitan in New York, she met and married Paruso. He died soon af- ter of concussion of the ear-drums ; a few years later she married a scene shifter, the widower of Lorna Rumball, of whom you may have heard. He was very ancient, so did not last long. About this time she published her famous .series of songs, Blessed Are the Married , Double Bliss , What Is Life W ithout Love , and most fam- ous of all My Hubby. Her fourth matrimonial venture proved her last. Her fame brought her to the notice of the Prince of Brazil, whom she married. Unfortunately, his passion for tom-tom music was so marked that she broke her neck trying to drown it out, and died. She is buried in the grounds she lov- ed so well, and the inscription on her tomb is And a song was on her Lps. Blow your trumpets, ye angels. Tlicy oiuittcd the ' Kest in Peace. ' Dorothy Sorby A long time ago. writes a famous Canadian historian ol: ihe 21st eentury, in the beautiful spot where now lie vhe ruins of the ancient town of Whitby, is a p.ctures([ue campus. The campus . r day revels in unrestrained wildness around the ruins of what once were vhe stately walls of Ontario Ladies ' College. One may yet see the subterranean swim- ming pool and the washing machines where was the laundry, both of whicli have gone down in history. Here it was that the most famous benefactress of her age, Miss Dorothea Sorby, dear- ly beloved by all who knew her, receiv- ed her education, graduating first u lionsehold Science and again in piano. She was deeply interested in sports for girls, and upon her final graduation provided special motor cars to convey the young ladies to and from the an- cient railway stations, liy a long, round- about and delightful drive. Miss Sor- l)y was fortunate one day in discover- ing a gold mine by finding how platin- um coidd be made from baked potato skins and the unused beans which were frequently wasted. Realizing that she owed this to the school, she bestowed many gifts and improvements upon it. The remains of the beautiful marble floor in what was then the lower hall, are still one of the marvels of this age. Upon leaving the college after bestow- ing numerous improvements which in- cluded moving stair-cases, gum slots, private mail boxes, and more, she came to Toronto. There she came in touch with the Humane Society, and Central Neighborhood Workers. Through hei ' work there she realized the need of a Home for Mad Dogs and another camp for the unruly children of poor famil- ies. So many dogs were restored to sanity, and so many children memor- ized the Bible that she received the Or- der of the Curly Haired Alligator from



Page 28 text:

26 VOX COLLEGII shabby and I mourued over the chang- es in the store as I laboriously climbed the stairs, (for I am not as thin as 1 used to be). As I turned a bend in the stairs my eye lighted on a worn, faded, bent woman who was scrubbing the steps Murmuring Excuse me. I was about to pass by when she raised her faded eyes to mine. Suddenly her glance be- came fixed on the lapel of my new Par- is coat, and with a startled cry she gas- ped Who are you? where did you get that? I gazed at my lapel and found that she was looking at my graduation pin. That is my Ontario Ladies ' College gaduation pin, I graduated in House- hold Science in June, 1923, I answer- ed in surprise. Household Science. she cried, Are you Maisie Bowman? I am I replied, and hope so to re- main. ' ' Don ' t you know me? she begged. 1 was Grace Mooclie. Then together we sat on the stairs, (I regardless of my Paris coat), while she told me her sad life story and our tears mingled together in the soapy water. Two years after graduating she had married a clerk on Eaton ' s fourth tloor. They had lived happily for some years, but he, being of a naturally fickle and restless temperament had left her and gone off to Europe and she had never heard of him since. She had waited for him, expecting his return, until her finances had be- come in such a state that she had to seek work. She had gone to Eaton ' s because of the old associations, and had begged for work and this was all she coulcL get. My keajt bled for her, but she would let me do nothing to help her. I had to leave her there and I had a dinner engagement, but I prom- ised to return this next day, and we would talk over old O.L.C. days. As I went up Yonge street, I thought with deep sorrow of the fate of the proud and willowy Grace Moodie, and I wondered what were the life stories of many others of my classmates whom 1 had not seen since leaving O.L.C. Myrtle Nesbitt While visiting Algonquin Park in the summer of 1935, some of our party wished to explore the interior of the Park and a guide was hired for the trip. AVhen the time came for us to start a tall, thin woman appeared to guide us. She had short, straight, black hair and wore no hat. We walked miles, the guide leading the way and pointing out spots of in- terest. Something about her attracted my attention. Was it the way she ran her liand through the back of her hair while talking so fluently on points of interest? I could not tell until 1 heard her start to discuss politics with one of the men of the party, then imme- diately turn and correct a lady with regard to the number of calories pres- ent in coffee. It was my old room-mate Myrtle Nesbitt. Of course, why hadn ' t I guess- ed it before? Many pictures flashed before my mind of the times I had seen her stand before the Civics Class at 0. L.C. and give us the U.F.O. Platform; the times we had figured out the hun- dred calorie portion o Fish eyes or Maccaroni and cheese. I felt I must speak to her and find out all that had happ ' ned to her in the years since we left our Alma Mater. She remembered me when I told her who I was and told me a little of her life since we had lost track of each other. After graduating she had taken the position as chief guide at Algonquin Park. This position she held for two years, leaving at the end of that time to be married. But she found married life and housekeping very monoton- ous. Her husband held different poli- tical views from hers, attended the Presbyterian Church and simply would not eat a sufficient number of calories per day ; and so her adventure in mat- rimony not being all that could be de-

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