Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive
A Publisher Extra® Newspaper

The Ottawa Journal from Ottawa, Ontario, Canada • Page 7

Location:
Ottawa, Ontario, Canada
Issue Date:
Page:
7
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

THE OTTAWA JOURNAL CNS Mainguy to Inspect Grove School's 'Admirals of Tomorrow9 FRIDAY, MAY 23. 1952. IT i i ACTION AFLOAT. With a long tradition of naval service for its graduates, Grove School, at Lakeneid, put a ipecial cohcentra-tion on the nautical tide of iporta activities, training pupili to handle dinghies and cutters. The school calls itself the "Cradle of Canada's and maintains a corps of naval cadets.

Here students train in the dinghy Under the eye of CPO George Lee, veteran of the Royal Navy, while (tanding-by in the cutter are a crew under Cadet PO David Dale, of Ottawa. AYPA's Contribution to Church Praised at Jubilee Service ANTHEMS ASHORE. In the school chapel where service is held daily, the boys at The Grove take personal part in the devotions. Here the head boy. Bill Boyd of Ottawa, reads the Lesson.

while listening behind him school students who form a are Alex Bovev. of Victoria, BC (left), and Gavin Rainnie. of Halifax. NS. Canada's Chief of Naval Staff, Vice Admiral E.

R. Mainguy will attend the chapel service when he returns to his former school to inspect the naval cadets May 24. Employers to Begin Using New Tax Schedules July 1 New srhedule, of tax deduc- tax at source now are making $50 a week hanrls nf Canadian emDlovers. who wi" u5in ihrm Ju 1. a Revenue Department spokesman said 1 nursaay.

The schedules incorporate changes in personal income tax of the last budget, which pro- vidfd fw dctTese of about jn income Ux and iVv i used bv the employer to deter- how much to deduct from n. a xf L-. tinffie no rteoendents making of formr avpa moulder of its soirit a week has been payinj $1 wreklv and now will Commemorating the Dominion-wide celebration of the the SOth anniversary of People. Association, members of the associations of the Ottawa Diocese In their hundreds at i i-j rvi it-miro last evening at 3i maunrw Church. Larnng avenue The order for Evening) Prayer was sung by Dean Howard Clark.

The lessons were read by L. J. Mills, Dominion president. 1935-17. snd Thomas Barnes, president of the OtUwa Diocesan Council, Intercessions were otiereo oy Rev.

Lloyd Bradley. Assisting, at the service were the com- ih. rihertral ST Matthew s. St. Luke's and R.

M.lthla. ehrrhe Allanson' Brown. FRCO. was at the organ. The sermon Rev.

Terence of St John Dominion AYPA. "Young people of today, generally speaking, are not confirmed with the said Mr. Flnlay. "Their Interest lies In the future." That is as it should be. but this evening we are gathered to dwell for a moment on 50 years growth and achievement of the AYPA of this Dominion snd In this diocese.

-When ne recalls that this great orgaabiatla for tht ast of balk sexes only came Into being J. M. Macdonnell Re-named Chairman Of Queens Board KINGSTON. Ont May. (Special) Reappointment of mscoonneu, Ottawa, as chairman ol the) Board of Trusters of Queen's University, and appointment of K.

C. Gill. Toronto, president of Canada Life Assuranoe Com-, pany, as vice-chairman of the board, were announced by Principal W. A. Mackintosh Thursday.

J. M. Farrell. QC. Kingston, has resigned as vice-chairman but will continue as a member of the Board of Trustees.

Other appointments and elections to the Board of Trustees are as follows: By the trustees for. a four-year term: Sens tor A C. Hardy, BrockviUe: H. G. Hilton.

Ham-lllonr- president of the Steel Company of Canada, and Dr Dennis Jordan. Toronto. -the trusteea-to- represent the faculty of applied science for three J. B. Stirling.

Montreal, president of E. G. M. Cape and Co. By the graduates for three years: Dr.

W. C. Clark. Ottawa. Deputy Minister of Finance, and D.

Flndlay, Carleton Place. By the benefactors: Mrs. W. Boucher, Kingston, for three years. and Alex E.

MacRae, Ottawa, for four years. By the University Council for three years' Mr. Justice C. A. Cameron, Ottawa, and J.

MacFarlane. Toronto, vice-president of Canadian General Electric Company. Italy Builds Corvettes For Pact Countries ROME. MaylxI-(Reuters) Corvettes and landing craft for the Atlantic Treaty navies will be built In Italian shipyards tinder negotiations now almost complete, the United States Embassy announced Thursday. The negotiations involve about 50 Italian 5uuita manufacturing Atlantic reaty defence material.

Journal Want Ada bring quick results. COSSSUTt KSMa tm Mat Hi. Sail mm4 Si mm SMct Ci. cia SS MI'S. n.

T. i was preacoea oy J. inlay, rector, Churcn. ana a pasu preaiaent oi ne I 7 In 1S0I. we eannot fail to inooie i mow, eany leaaers oi enthusiasm and courage.) yrl eharek Immeasareable.

From Its: ranks have come many members of the clergy. Sunday school taehen ehnrehararrtna inrf prominent laymen whs are aay leaders In the church. thj, Ascension Dav' The late Admiral Percy Nelles, Admiral Mainguy's wartime pre decessor. was an Old Boy of The Grove. So are Commodore vHugh Pullen.

Captain Cecil i umrvj iiq v-apiain iumi nuprr. Commander Tom Pullen. Commander Fred Frewer and Commander John Bovry (com manding HMCS are old Grove boys alsa Foar Admirals' Sons. Tw0 ycarl lgo four onf oJ four were attending Tne Grov, Lakeneid. Some have recently graduated among' tnem Admira, Mainguy.

son. ActuallvTheGrovewa.de- bv jounM.r lnli r. to oe a scnool tor tne sons or oarticularlv for the Armv offic-r, in n. in 1170 headmaster. G.

Winder Smith. is in the mihury tradition. He; is a graduate of the Royal Mili-' in the military tradition. He festival is found in Our Lord's marching orders to His little group of disciples when He told them that they were to be witnesses hot only in their own communj ty but to the whole, collrilrv and to the furthest! lh me service tne Ascen-1 .1 "J' he, Urd UP on Hlh b' c.nori't' Bishop Jefferson pronounced the blessing. utaLK RijuHIiLBAtJ.

who leaves for Renfrew shortly to take up his new position as director of the town's rccre- ation a nil 'also to become secretary of the Board of Trade. Mr. Rusheleau has served with the Ottswa Recreation Commission and the new Department of Public Recre ation for the past four and a half years In various posts. A. J.

FREIMAN'S 'a'f 1 i Is I When Canada's Chief of Naval 8US Vice Admiral R. Mam-fuy returns to Tb Grove. LakeAeld, tomorrow to Inspect its naval cadets, he will be like aa admiral returning to his owa training ship. The Grove is a boarding school for 129 boys, giving the usual academic training through Clemen tary schooling up to senior matriculation; but circumstances have made it much more. It has become the alma mater, the fostering mother of Canadian naval officers.

The late King Georfe went tq Osborne as a boy, for his naval schooling. But Canada has no Osborne for aspiring youth tasting a navsl career. Royal Roads at Esqulmalt is for young men who have already matriculated. So the future Lords Louis Mountbatten of Canada go to The Grove School on the shores of Lake Kgtchewanooka. an inland Ka-wartha Lake 10 miles north of Peterborough.

lary L.ouege. oui none losicrs tnr samr mor, than the naval tradition of The inr. uith in more enthusiastically than Head-li master Winder Smith, who has! his old-fashioned yacht in which u. explore uie Kawsrth The r. ui Uirf four-square by its famous and reaches of the'min, i i i am atmosphese and Its cottage-tike 95- A' kiMln nv.rlnnkln lh to continue the homely, pleasant but disciplined and well mannered ways charted by Dr.

Mackenzie. There is its dignified chapel, with a pipe organ and school choir presided over by an Oxford musician. There the fine new Memorial House lust completed, a tribute to the 54 Old Boys who fell In the two World Wars. There Is the freedom and freshness of the pastoral lake countryside. Fleet af Boats.

And of course with its own boathouses and wide lakefront. The Grove has a flotilla of small craft which the boys handle! under the benign "Chief', Chief' Petty Officer George Lee, DSM. friend and counsellor to two; generations of Grove Boys. i Tomorrow Admiral Mainguy puts his seal on HCSCC "St. his benediction on a unique Canadian institution, and his "fond approval on a school whose motto is "Mens sana in corpore sano" "A healthy mind in a sound body Whether in' cricket, naval skills, hockey.

football, bird-nesting, maple syrup making, or matriculation standing, the Grove School of, Lakeneid gets uncommonly sure responses. FREIMAN LIMITED and FARM AND HOME CENTRE (McCoy Service Limited) CLOSED VICTORIA DAY SATURDAY, MAY 24th SHOP MONDAY, MAY 26th each employe's weekly or nnv re In most cases slightly higher than the ones man $30, 85 pay week, his tax from it GRADUATE NURSE Miss Helen T. Hendrick. daughter of Mr. snd Mrs.

Patrick J. Hendrick. Chelsea, who graduated recently from St. Joseph's School of Nursing in Peterborough. Miss Hendrick is also a graduate of Immacu-lata High School.

Journal Wanf Ads bring quick results. Ik are two of the 125 boarding roast to coast audience. Thtv $80 to S12 60 from $12 07S and $100 to $17.25 from $16 90. A married man with no de i w. tinfl u.ulrlu nd now will pay $2 10.

Ai rDro' aooui rouna his tax rises to $8.30 from $7 5 and at $100 to $12.95 from $12 40 A married man with two chil- drcn making $50 a week has been paying 95 cents inrt will pay $1. At $R0 his tax rises $7 from $6 75 and at $100 to i i i rnrn in in BLOWN TO BITS. WULBLL. May 23 ai- bert Nadeau. 31-year-old man who police say suffered from a iticnui disease, was louna Thursday blown to bit on the wiim oi inr oi.

liimi n-a iivci here. Police said the lumberjack placed two sticks of dynamite in the ground last night, lighted the fuse and received the full impart of the explosion. "IVAN MULLIGAN, son of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Mulligan of Beechgrove.

who will receive the degree of Bachelor of Arts from McGill University at the May 28 convocation. What suits YOU uplift? Ever Sfonder why a littla dig you make, half in jet, may cause some one you leva to Bar up In June Reader 'a Dianit.Howard Whitman explain the 3 basic emotional needs avcryon haa. and tells how yon may causa tension and pain by remarka that touch another steak spot. He shows how seemingly trivial "tracks" hva actually wracked soany a marriage; how thin as parent asy "without thinking eaua ehiMnm mwvlleaa anauiah. Iarn now you can guard against hurting thoae you wr.

Gat your Jim Reader's Digest today: 39 adtielea of lasting; intae-et. eondenaed from leading ssaga-sinrt current books. Help Yoo Overcome FALSE TEETH Looieiicss and Worry lf kmcr nrrared or feci 111 at mm because of too, wobhlv i1m tMth. PASTCsCTH. an lmprovd alka- urn (iicm-acmi powatr pntixitd on rour plat Mldi thm rirmr hy fl mort eomfortabW loothing ami coollnc to fame mad Mrt by x-cepvlva acM mouUv AvtMtl omborriiM-mapnt nutH by loocw plataM.

Got rABTMTH today at rty dru nor COME IN SAVE on HOLIDAY SPORTS WEAR sss1iiiwiijasfa HCADACHisUI 7 ret fie xft? lj ALLEN KELLET. BISTORT REOPENED AT will be held at Royal Military N. H. G. ANDERSON.

KMC For the first time since College June 2. Three Ottawa cadets will be among the RCAT contingent to graduate and receive -commtss ions at the colorful parade. Flight Leader Kelley, 21, a son of Mr. and Mrs. W.

B. Kellry. 43 WUlsrd avenue, is a Glebe gradual and received hi pilot's wings at Centralis last year. Section Commander Anderson, 21. is a son of the late AVM N.

R. Anderson and Mrs. Anderson. He attended Nepean High School and-won his navigator's wings at Summerside. EI.

Commander Arnold Is a son of Mra." C. L. Arnold, 316 Gilmour street, and is a Lis gar grad. He received his navigator's wings with Cadet Anderson. Weather Balloon Stirs 'Saucer' Rumors At Pembroke PEMBROKE.

May 23 (Staff) An Air Force weather balloon on the loose caused a living saucer scare in Pembroke Wed nesday night. A shining ball of light which mystified townspeople it ntet lr' equipment It had been released from the, Trenton Air Force station and was carrying experimenul instrumenta While hundreds stood on Pern- brake's mam street and specu-' lated whether sooie Arcturian visitor was spying on the town. a i who "knew all about tf were cours' by "dar i ne Dauoon was nrst noticed a-' uoaiea niun in 'he air. Caught by the. beam, of the sun.

it took well over an hour to pa.ss over the town. oui ni siuiu iar in the East, a dim red spot in the before it disappeared 'wo persons at feiawawa Militarv Camo saw it earlier in Ithe evening, according to Col Duncan Douelas. eaniD com- mandant. Col. Douglas, queried by The Journal when the ball of light was first seen in Pembroke.

was sure it had not originated in the camp. reporieo oosrrvaiinri was by a Westmeath man. who saw it while it was still plainly in view over Pembroke 10 miles away. Air Force authorities said tne balloon might be as high as 9.000 Perth Kinsmen Raised $1,011 From Auction PERTH, May 23 (Special) A net profit-of $1,011 04 was realized by the Perth Kinsmen Club from the auction sale at Perth fair grounds, announced chairman Don Weskett at the Kinsmen', meeting A total of $1,295 4 was the result of the sale made up of sale of goods. $1,008 21; $165 18 from the Kinettes rummage sale and $122.50 cash donations.

Expenses amounted to $284 64 The proceeds from the sale will go into the Kinsmen's Youth Renfrew Collegiate Cadets Praised At Inspection RENFREW. May 2.1. (Spe- cial) High praise was given by officer, at the annual inspection of Renfrew Collegiate- I 1 1831: Cadc.t Lt. CoL a rali t. Ihi -i rnior tm kaiaiiu was neia ii inr armories Drciuif Impeding officer, were: U.

Col. A. Wallace. ED. command-, cn.K 1 A ing the 59th LA A Regt.

RCA Li Cpk A ILw.ry' Cadet! inmg un- tario Area, and Capt. G. Leding- ham. Commanding 178th Bat- tov- Kenirew. Thr cadPU wfrr "ut 'V1 mention by Capt.

Hnwey who said I ve wen them all and the Renfrew girls l.i).. win ma 1 1 Build, rg Fund. The club has nn innnn i tno youth nf the town LANGFORD'S OFFER A CONVENIENT PAYMENT PLAN for the Purchase of Fine Diamonds Silverware jewellery LANGFORD'S 288 BANK jt Somerset iffl METAL TYPEwlHTEP, TARLES EVANS "If it's turd in an 13Z Quean Street 1 I 1 As- JOHN E. ARNOLD. 1M2, graduation ceremonies icral salute and the March Past, the girls gave a physical training demonstration.

Demonstrations were given by the cadet corps as follows: Gun Crew, battle drill section in attack, rifle coaching, jBren gun, Sten, signal wireless group, ursi aia ana piaioon training The following diplomas were presented by Lt. Col Wallace to member, of the Ipperwash a "1 D-Dymond. Basie Trg. Inst; Cadet Lt. B.

Earjy. Sr. Leader; Cadet Cpl. G. Don- Sr.

Lea.deri CadetCpt a "eatnerneafl Leader; Cadet Cpl. F. Ball, Jr. Leader; Cadet G. Burton.

Dr. Mech 'wneciea op. UW B. Dr' CPL Holmes Dr. Cadet Cpl.

C. B. Sanderson. Dr. Mech.

Ipperwash Contingent for 1 luuaiai. vi. i ixwirif 11 a 111 well. K. Saumure; Signals B.

ilm alu Donald- son. B. "Weatherhead. Move It Anywhr lt rolls at a finger's touch to wherever you want to use it. Ideal for the man or woman who types occasionally.

Useful In horn or office. And it's a typewriter table that's actually easy on the budget, tool See It here along with numerous helpfully priced office items. KERT Ltd. ojict tre sell if 2-1701 iiijii mm I' Gn II ROM Y0U2 EOiOEN KllXMAN 01 FKOHE 2 S74I i 1 aKSH rj--sia. -r 'aaati a a 'aWI.

L..

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

Publisher Extra® Newspapers

  • Exclusive licensed content from premium publishers like the The Ottawa Journal
  • Archives through last month
  • Continually updated

About The Ottawa Journal Archive

Pages Available:
843,608
Years Available:
1885-1980