Western Canada High School - Yearbook (Calgary, Alberta Canada)

 - Class of 1932

Page 82 of 96

 

Western Canada High School - Yearbook (Calgary, Alberta Canada) online collection, 1932 Edition, Page 82 of 96
Page 82 of 96



Western Canada High School - Yearbook (Calgary, Alberta Canada) online collection, 1932 Edition, Page 81
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Western Canada High School - Yearbook (Calgary, Alberta Canada) online collection, 1932 Edition, Page 83
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Page 82 text:

Page eighty YEAR SOUTH CALGARY HIGH SCHOOL (1928 - 29) 1949 Israel Abramson; 1950 Lucy L. Ambury; 1951 Albert James Anderson; 1952 Annie Isabel Anderson; 1953 Ethel May Anderson; 1954 Evelyn M. Apperley; 1955 Leonard Duane Barr; 1956 Eva May Belshaw; 1957 Elizabeth M. Mary Bid- dell; 1958 Clifford M. Blow; 1959 Elmer Bolinger; 1960 William Harlow Bowen; 1961 Thomas Carr Brackenbury; 1962 William George Briggs; 1963 Alberta O. Brown; 1964 Alma Myrtle Campbell; 1965 Jack Bruce Campbell; 1966 Mary Hilda Clark; 1967 Ward Brainerd Clark; 1968 Malvena Clarke; 1969 Margaret Collieson; 1970 Richard Tom Craik; 1971 Alexander Crichton; 1972 Grace M. Cumming; 1973 Russell H. Dingle; 1974 Grace Iomma Dowdell; 1975 Muriel G. Duncan; 1976 Lillian Mary Dyer; 1977 Marion E. Ferguson; 1978 Gwendoline G. H. Gate; 1979 Cora Elizabeth Graff; 1980 Jack Muirhead Graham; 19Sl Winifred Graves; 1982 Herbert Hall; 1983 Margaret Harley; 1984 Albert M. Hartwick; 1985 Patricia M. Harvey; 1986 Robert Frank Hawes; 1987 Bertha Maude Hickson; 1988 James Ellsworth Hoagland; 1989 W. Robert Hood; 1990 Esther A. Horwood; 1991 Ena Edith Humphrey; 1992 James Arthur Irwin; 1993 John Pitcairn Jackson; 1994 William Edward Jacobs; 1995 Susannah James; 1996 Roy Sidney Jenkins; 1997 Carman M. Johnson; 1998 Fred Johnston; 1999 Wallace Richard Joyce; 2000 Stephen Roy Kerr. Jj it 1C n li t it g (JH c tit n r u - of - DUNCAN JONES who died at CALGARY, ALBERTA Saturday, March 12th, 1932. In regular attendance at Western Canada for the past two years. iExrbangF GRACE EGLESTON, Secretary “THE BUGLE”—C.H.C.I., Calgary. We enjoyed your magazine very much. We thought the literary section was especially fine. “YE FLAME”—Regina, Saskatchewan. An exceptionally good publication. Your book contained many good write-ups. KELVIN TECHNICAL HIGH SCHOOL, Winnipeg, Manitoba. We enjoyed your publication and consider it one of the best we have received. We admire your splendidly organized school clubs.

Page 81 text:

BOOK Page seventy-nine Speer; 1778 Dorothy Marjorie Splane; 1779 Kathleen Agnes Stockton; 1780 Hazel Thompson, 1781 Dorothy Wade; 1782 Eleanor May West; 1783 Isabel Kathleen Whitney; 1784 Nora Gwladys A. Williams; 1785 Jean Margaret Wilson; 1786 Wilmoth Eleanor Wilson; 1787 Margaret Helen Wooding; 1788 Hilda Alberta Wright; 1789 Winona Gladys Young; 1790 Ena Youngblood. WESTERN CANADA (OLD BUILDING) 1828 -29 1791 Frank Stacey Aikins; 1792 Everet Brock Allan; 1793 Benjamin Allen; 1794 MacLaren Lorne Anderson; 1795 William Joseph Barron; 1796 Roy Alfred Bee; 1797 Mark Bernard Bercov; 1798 Leonard Bercuson; 1799 Ronald Grant Birney; 1800 Harry Cleland Blow; 1801 Joseph Gordon Boothman; 1802 James Arthur Clarence Bowes; 1803 Floyd Clifford Bremer; 1804 Robert William Brews; 1805 Francis Marten Brink; 1806 Julius Bulshin; 1807 Lorne Edward Burkell; 1808 Edwin John Burwash; 1809 John Frederick Butler; 1810 Harry Frank Butlin; 1811 Jack Edwin Cameron; 1812 Alfred Douglas Campbell; 1813 James Melville Campbell; 1814 John Macaulay Carson; 1815 Alexander Cartwright; 1816 Harry Cartwright; 1817 John Greer Chaston; 1818 Kenneth Claude Cherer; 1819 William John Clarke; 1820 Robert M. Cook; 1821 Robert Townsend Cook; 1822 George Harvey Gordon Cooper; 1823 John Bryson Corley; 1824 Norman Fulford Cragg; 1825 Scott Crerar; 1826 Edwin Verne Davidson; 1827 William David Davidson; 1828 Robert Eric Cook Davies; 1829 Arthur Patrick Davis; 1830 Robert George Dawson; 1831 Herbert Richard Dickieson; 1932 Harold Dingman; 1833 Frank Doherty; 1834 Reginald Driver; 1835 Robert Graham Durno; 1836 Thomas Mc- Kitrick Eason; 1837 George Albert England; 1838 Morris Estrin; 1839 Edward Morris Findlay; 1840 Dan Desmond Flanagan; 1841 Murray Arthur Ford; 1842 Murray Robert Forsyth; 1843 Frederick David Fraser; 1844 Frederick James Garbutt; 1845 Eric Gardener; 1846 Jack Gordon; 1847 Ellis Gray; 1848 Wesley Charles Greer; 1849 Sidney Groberman; 1850 Philip Leon Hadfield; 1851 Melville Hanning; 1852 George Douglas Harvey; 1853 Roderick Henselwood; 1854 Gordon Benjamin Himmelman; 1855 William Harold Hodsmythe; 1856 Ronzy Keith Hol¬ man; 1857 Vincent Michael Charles Holt; 1858 Roy James Houston; 1859 Charles Lyman Hunt; 1860 Ronald Harmon Hunt; 1861 Dixon Gordon Hutton; 1862 Ronald Henry Jenkins; 1863 Walter Stanley Johns; 1864 William Tufts Johnson; 1865 John Peter Karaim; 1866 Harold Keith; 1867 Albert Victor Laven; 1868 Jack Stewart Lawrence; 1869 Herbert Legg; 1870 David B. Longbotham; 1871 Horace Jack Love; 1872 Frank Austen Lovell; 1873 Alan Mackay; 1874 Albert Mclvor; 1875 Arthur McKay; 1876 John Charles Alexander McLachlan; 1877 Donald Pres¬ ton McLaws; 1878 Arthur Wellington McLeod; 1879 John Ronald McMurchy; 1880 Ronald James McNeill; 1881 James Franklin Maguire; 1882 Joe Stanley Mahood; 1883 Winston Alan Mahood; 1884 John Henry Marriott; 1885 Jack Leslie Marshall; 1886 Clifford Emmanuel Maxie; 1887 Homer Smith Meers; 1888 Kenneth William Moodie; 1889 Alfred Jack Moore; 1890 Guy Kent Morton; 1891 Joseph Graham Murray; 1892 James Leonard Nesbitt; 1893 John Nicolson; 1894 Robert Finlay Ohlson; 1895 Sackville Palmer; 1896 Gilbert George Patterson; 1897 Robert Mathew Pearson; 1898 Leslie Albert Pocock; 1899 Thomas George Potts; 1900 Donald George Pratt; 1901 Carson C. Proby; 1902 Wesley Arthur Reed; 1903 Jefferson Frederick Roberts; 1904 Walter Herbert Roberts; 1905 Bruce Lachlan Robinson; 1906 Peter Banks Robinson; 1907 Murray Brydon Ross; 1908 William Johnathan Ross; 1909 George Elmer Ruttle; 1910 Douglas Acton Sargent; 1911 Armin Schlatter; 1912 William John Sewell; 1913 Peter Sharkey; 1914 Charles Thomas Sherring; 1915 William Adair Simonton; 1916 James William Sloan; 1917 Bonn Cory Smith; 1918 Charles Herbert Smith; 1919 Reginald Leo Scott Smith; 1920 Russell Melville Snowdon; 1921 Charles William Sparling; 1922 John Dray¬ ton Spence; 1923 James Paul Stack; 1924 Leslie Harold Stevens; 1925 John Stevenson; 1926 Elder Willard Stewart; 1927 Gordon Francis Stewart; 1928 Douglas Cecil Stuart; 1929 James William Tanner; 1930 Jack Wilbert Thomas; 1931 Murdo Thomson; 1932 Kenneth Francis Tildesley; 1933 Frank Buchanan Totten; 1934 Geoffrey Gerald Van Stockum; 1935 George William Walker; 1936 Joseph Jeffrey Walker; 1937 Robert Garth Gilbert Walker; 1938 Howard Clifton Watkins; 1939 Thomas Webster; 1940 Stevenson Albert Welton; 1941 James Thomas Whitfield; 1942 George Francis Willoughby; 1943 Alexander M. Wilson; 1944 Archie Frederick Wolton; 1945 Arthur Gordon Wooding; 1946 Thomas Woth- erspoon; 1947 Robert Irvine Wright; 1948 Frank Zelinck.



Page 83 text:

BOOK Page eighty-one ar m ffrarr By EVA McTAVISH, Class 4, Room 16 On Tuesday, the second day of February, nineteen hundred and thirty-two, the first Disarmament Conference called by the League of Nations will open at Geneva. Every country in the world will be represented because, although United States, Russia and Turkey are not yet members of the League of Nations, they are sending represenatives to this conference. As the whole world realizes, civil¬ ization is on the brink of the greatest catastrophe—war; and it is the hope of every man, woman and child that through the medium of the Disarmament Con¬ ference, civilization will be saved from this catastrophe. But what are the nations doing individually toward disarmament? Stalin, the Dictator of Russia, recently said that the only chance of avoiding another industrialistic war was to disarm, and yet, within sound of his voice, in Red Square, lounged numbers of soldiers reminding us that Russia maintains the largest standing army in the world, many divisions of which are stationed along the Manchurian boundary watching China-Japanese developments. Then the voice of Mussolini is heard proclaiming that Italy has repeatedly offered to consent to any kind of arms reduction while overheard roars the greatest concentration of military aeroplanes in the history of the world—1,000 machines of all kinds. In France we see Aristide Briande, the peace apostle, dramatically adjuring, “Away with cannons, away with machine guns,” while his voice is almost drowned by the roar of hundreds of fighting aeroplanes taking part in the greatest peace¬ time mobilization ever attempted by the French army which today is the most powerful in the world. Even the citizen population is called upon to submit to such discipline as would be imposed in event of a gas or bomb attack from the air. This scheme was carried out most proficiently by the army, the navy and the air force and marked a new step in combined training for war. This is rather an evil omen toward promised French leadership in peace. Today United States is spending more money on armament than any other country in the world and yet last June when President Hoover announced the war debt moratorium he advised the countries to which it was being extended, to re¬ duce their armament expenditure, while the very same day newspapers carried word that the Chemical Warfare Service of the American Army had perfected a new method of spraying from aeroplanes a poisonous gas which would exterminate whole battalions just as insects in orchards and fields are sprayed with deadly chemicals. And some days before this an American bomber dropped a 4,000 pound bomb which properly placed would destroy a whole city block. The American aeroplane industry in 1931 showed an increase over 1930. Why? Because more aeroplanes were bought for the army and navy. While Japanese statesmen were assuring audiences that Japan was whole¬ heartedly behind disarmament proposals, their troops were occupying Mukden and today the Japanese are bombing the international settlement in Shanghai. The newspapers carry photographs showing Japanese armoured trains, aeroplanes, tanks, artillery and infantry in action against Chinese, and Chinese prisoners being marshalled into barbed wire compounds. Does this portend Japan’s inten¬ tion of backing disarmament and peace ? Fourteen years ago Germany was almost completely disarmed by the Treaty of Versailles, yet during the week of December 1, 1931, two editors of a Liberal

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