Angus School Report Tests and per cent. standing in Sen- ior Room. A V Sr.-Rona1d Pattison, 15 tests, 87. Sr. IV-l3 tests, Eunice Middlebrook 78, Lemma. .Wi1loughby '75, Evelyn Mc- Mackon 71, Donna. Brillinger (12) 61, Kathleen Brillinger 58, Elsie Orr (12) 46, Phyllis Langsford (11) 40, Kenneth Bush (3), not ranked. Ar. 1-tr `IA 4...~+p,,,,A-n~uu- `l'\unb1unr1~n Luuguuy \1.a; :10, 1111111: vvuAauu \a/ u Jr. _III--11 tests-F'lorence Hanlon 87, Jean Mccracken 87, Thelma Coul- ` son 77, Keenan Willoughby (10) 77, Donald Ross 74, Charlie Ross 73, Jean ' Cripps (9) 68, Emerson Symes 68, Teresa Brillinger (10) 67, Dorothy ' Gibson (9) 66, George Smith ('7) 36, `Gertrude Duckworth ('7) 34, Jim West- gley (6) 23, Jack Brennan (4), not ranked. :3 xrrrrmn cnnlnu Tnanhnr DUEII. \J), 1lUl: LUALLRCU. 'Jr. IV-14 tests--Arthur Duckworth 72, Victor Eaton (12) 65, Bernice Mc- Mackon 64, Oscar Irwin (13). 35, Mar- garet Couch (12) 52, Kathleen Smith (10) 44, Edna Woolsey (12) 41, Elliott Bush (12) 41, Nellie Myers (9) 25. Q- 117,41 : +~_-n.-_A1i.-A I11-inn: (1'2\ |Dusu \14) '21, ncuu: Auycna \a; nu Sr. m-13 t.ests-A1ice crzpps (12) '75, Carl Symes 65, Edith Gibson (12) :64, Olive Linklater (11) 58, Jack W11- lloughby (12) 56, Annie Coulson (9) 54. `hp T1741 1 4-m:+c__`l4"1n1-Ah on T-Tn n1nn 5 ways ab uuua. xuuxauw a. .: Miss Lizzie Thurlow has gone to ;Toronto to spend the winter with her - lsister, Mrs. C. R. Kelly. 11 At time of writing John Kelly is .......:;.....1.. ~"l`l (Too late for last week) Dec. 31--Miss Lena Richardson is `spending a _few holidays under the -parental roof. I um" mm nnmmino 1: hndavimz - parenLa1 rum. Mrs. Wm. Cumming is holidaying {with her mother, Mrs. A. Strath, of | Saurin. ~ :1 1-u_I....._I....... A.-`A ll:-a 'l`n'hA'l enn-nf aunuay at. r 1`cu ruuuuxuaun a. Mrs. Rutland Elrick spent a few zdays with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. D. Jarnieson of Hillsdale. I v_ _y_ vs. .1 4-nan! H-an 1-\n1_ I -T-Inn-no------v vvuainchuunnhebl-" ll_ \1n._. x1.ll..ll_. Vgna-1. f H. Richardson and Miss Mabel spent `Sunday at Fred Richardson's. l mr...- Dnnnnrl `I211:-int: cnnnf. n. few U. aannesou U1 .r.uuauu.u:. I Jack Bell of Elmvale spent the ho1- 1 idays at Chas. Thurlow s. A 11%.. Tirrrrln 'N-mrlnm ha: cmnp fn nu utunc \. `I seriously ill. ' Into my arms, my love, to me, Sweet is the breath of ecstasy. Tender thine eyes turn up to mine, For in their depths thy love doth shine. `;Lips, sweetly smiling, touch my own, Pure as a snowake gainst them I.1......... E blown. _ `Curved and soft and warm they feel :As round my neck thy dear arms steal, Thou hast encircled my life with bliss. Oh! What a world came with that | Blnnl It you tell it well, the goods will sell. L- 170. J. R. MILLER, Senior Teacher. I-'ERiGU_SONVALE TWENTY-FIVE CENTS . . the new low price of Edison Mazda Lamps in the three most popular sizes . . 25-watt, 40- watt and 60-watt. These most modern lamps are frosted on the inside to prevent harmful _ __ , _ A______, """ '-" 1' '"""' %L soon E To ION AI-nnn AND NIC TOO glare. KISS uuuuu uu--......___, , SITY-FIVE aw lLarnps if nd most .-n side They are manufactured to the highest standards of quality by Canadian General _E!ectric Company. Order a carton today and take advan- tage of these new prices . . the lowest at which Edison Mazda` Lamps have ever sold 2!: Canada. ,,.12o -William S herrey. Just` as_ I 'Will Take You Safely S509 So F. G. OKE 3. co. ROBERT `SYDNEY FLETCHER lvlinnispnrn -_ :_-___7 , TORONTO, ST. THOMAS, WINDSOR, LONDCJN. LINDSAY, KITCHENER, ORILLIA, PETERBORO Local Office 12 Owen St. The Royal Bank. of Canada Barrie Branch Thornton Branch A Bankl_Account 3% 2:;-W % W A Good Defence Will Win in Sports- .9 MlNl1`{G_`S_']"(`)_l`(` 'l_3ROKER`S III\(\I'\l'\ 1 Wgmgsl Steady Stroke :11 : : Pbo 1440 H. A. HENRY, Resident Manager MACLAREN. FLETCHER & C INVESTMENT BANKERS 704 Canadian Pacific Building, Toronto - I. R. Diet, Manager" R. H. Buckingham, Manager TRIC PRQDUC1; Thursday, January 9, 19 Over Life's Hurdles CORPORATON % BONDS GOVERNMEN MUNICIPAL T VUIIUCI I Hi Take it ._I_-_ CORRESPONDENCE SOLICITED . FOR'I_'Y she meets Stevens he is frantic, regret- ml and still ardent in protestations of HIADI love. love. Leeeon informs Lucy that Stevens znuat raise a quarter of a million dol- lars or go to jai1--"at five o'clock." Lucy goes to her bank and raises the sum. Lucy goes to Stevens to help him, out he refuses to take money from a woman to whom he is not married. so Lucy marries this man that she hates, and promptly runs `away from him} going to her staunch friend Dr. Per- xus Faunce to tell what she has done. -L---__- -..L.. Mu-g In unnrnh nf LIICV. Kill ruuucc UU ucu nuuu -..- ..... __--- Stevens sets outs in search of Lucy. 1 Meanwhile, Dr. Faunce and Lucy 1 launch a new boat. A hurricane wrecks them on their first trip. Lucy ` is saved, and finds herself aboard the Minerva, wondering what happened to Dr. Faunce. - Dr. Faunce ls aboard the Minerva 4.130. Stevens threatens to kill Faunce mless Lucy sticks to him. To save Faunce she accedes, but expresses hate for Stevens. A few minutes later .16 startles her by saying he doesn't want her. and never will. 7 ....m-. can: 1'.11nv and in 8. burst 01 AND and wm. Leeson sees Lucy and in confidence tells her of a plot against her husband. Certain interests are to break down the bridges on his proper- 4... ...m make it worthless. she goes tn; bridges ms proper- ty and make it worthless. to Faunce's place. where her husband and Faunce are rtogether, and tells of the plot. Preparations are made for a fight. Lucy's husband and the man she loves make common cause against the invaders and hold the bridges against the crooked sheriff and his gang, backed by Clary, the copper magnate. Lucy leaves them together as she rows back to Mango Key, gets her car and finds Judge Learning. NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY She told herselflthat her desire to k be -back on the bridge was due to her desire for fair play, to her reluctance to leave any excitement behind her. But even as she told herself these things, she realized that she was not admitting the whole truth. Certain` shy thoughts intruded. `.1-low magnifi- cent Tlm had been. I -.-7-... ..u.m.m Ammm nf fpar he was! cent Tim nan been. . How utterly devoid of fear he was! She was awake when he returned, somewhat after dawn, to the house, and she descended quietly to the patio. lest the servants be awakened, to greet him. um um: haggard. mud-stained. E lgreet mm. ' He was haggard, mud-stained. stubble of heard was on his chin, but his spirits were gay. I-Ie grinned at her. _..,v ,1- -11 than L-up a vvqqn VA sun oyosnvu u... =,..._,. __- If you'd do all this for a man you hat&-well! what you'd be capable of b for a man you loved, Lucy Devil-May_- r Care!" he said to her. v She felt herself blush. ,t "I like fair play, she said. i Oh. I know. Don t be worried. I'll t not bother you. Gosh, but Pm hun- : cry! ' t Sit down," she said. 1 He eyed her curiously, but dropped into a chair. She went to the kitchen I and turned on the electric stove; she l was back in just ten minutes, bearing 1 a tray on which was steaming coffee 1 and a plate of scrambled eggs. ll "But you don't get it unless you tell ` me everything that happened," she warned. ' "Oh, you saw all the excitementi| he laughted. Learning arrived at_ five -, this morning. He'd brought court of- I. ficers with them; he presented an or- . der restraining any one from entering ` upon my property until title was ad- judicatecl. I think the old boy exceed- i; ed his powers a bit, but it doesn't matter, because Clary and I came to, an understanding. Clary s a rotten' winner, I'd guess, but he knows how! to lose. offered to buy me out at my` price. I told him I was here to stay; so he offered to effect a combination of his holdings with mine, my crowd to have the majority stock, and we shook hands on it. uA_1-. ...-1.... blano roan? eonn WA! At A party in Palm Beach given by It. cooper Clary, Leeson, sn sttor- say. meets Lucy I-Isrimess. known so Devil-May-Care because of her adven- turous. eventful life. In a. game in which partners for the evening are chosen. Lucy is won by 'I'im Stevens. who has a great reputation as I. Inc- eudui heart-breaker. Leeson is s bit . Tim Stevens tells Lucy they are [ulna sbosrd his boat, the Minerva. L sad the accedes in order not to be ` s quitter". Asked if she is sorry that ho won her company, Lucy says she is not snd that evidently Pat has 31'- unzed it. Tim thereupon tells her to op looking regreuuiiy after Lesson. Aboard Stevens boat. the Minerva. ltevens tells Lucy oi his love. When she replies with contempt for him, he grows Violently angry and she becomes sfrsid or him. He says he will never let her go from the Minerva until she accepts him. To escape him, she leaps into the water from her cabin win- dow, swimming a short distance under -u-6- SROOK names on 1. Only man that wasn't satisfied was - th emarshal. I thought he was shert, but he was smaller try than that. Yep, Maddox was pretty sore at,what I'd said. and the men I'd slugged were angry, so I m under arrest, out on bail, and I'm to be tried this after- noon. I d plead guilty and pay a fine; t only, this Maddox chap got my goat. and he ought to be removed from his two-penny office, so I'll go to court. And that's that." nu... ....... Inn and nut nf the house. And that's man." Tim was up and out of the house. when at -lunch-time, she awoke and _ GORDON G. MGCLAREN --_-n uressen. nae wine a.......... sence. and vaguely hurt. -v......\.um ennmd stray vs. nun. . Luncheon sgxfgd strangely lonely. `lgin Pwicilgioiggefg ``3~ She wondered if Tim were with Fer- |Man'an `Stewart Biyeg CV B05795 gus Faunce, and tried to imagine what; Jr Pr_DOr( ,th VM u.an' had brought these two together in VKeu' P ' Mcc uy 01715 William amity. She couldn't guess. Restlessness`. eggy 9` um Em BrWn18- possessed her. A And mmnv she swallowed her pride. on, my dear, he might have heard possessed her. I And finally she c She telephoned the courthouse and !1 learned that Tlm s trial was set for. two o'clock. She drove over to West 1 Palm Beach, parked her car, entered . ` 4-I-- .......-nu-..-men was directed 1'0 the g Beach, parxeu net um, c..m.... the courthouse, was directed -......-. -nnvn and mined the crowd directed to we proper room, and joined that thronged in the corridor outside` it. . She could make no headway: through the crowd until she be- thought herself to state, to an b.ttend- 1 ant, her name. Then way was made! am um. um aha found herself in the Lucy reaches land and meets Dr. Fergus Faunce on an island. He take: care or her and takes her home. Ev- cryone I; worried about her. and when ant, her name. when way was ........ .1 for her, and she found herself 1 courtroom. Her husband saw her, whispered to a lawyer, and that wor-1. thy immediately came to her side, and `_ 1 led her to a seat beside Tim. `- Stevens seemed a bit worried. My lawyers have been telling me . that a conviction, trifling as it is, : won't help me with investors. It's not ` terribly important, but-would you mind testifying in my behalf?" I Why-of course not, she replied.j The judge opened proceedings. Mad- . dox, called and sworn, testified thati he, acting upon the request of Clem- ent Clary. who had told him he had: reason to believe that violence would ` be offered his peaceful gang of labor-I * ers by the defendant, had, with half a` dozen deputies, gone to Seminole` - Creek. There two of his deputies had I been assaulted by the defendant, Tlm- `. ' othy Stevens, who had later threaten- .4 1ur.A.-my with a revolver. He had othy SDEVGIIS, W110 uuu xuucx w.u.ca.u.n- 1 ed Maddox with a revolver. put Stevens under arrest, but the de- 1 fendant had resisted restraint. g ,. v.1- .3......L.. many-a`hn lc umra uuluuuu Lulu svw-vvvu -v-v-----n Yvvuuu uy ____ Two of his deputy marshals were ` Breakers stood, called and corroborated his testimony. |gina1 cost of Then Stevens took the stand. Duly icombined. sworn, he began his story. _ I The sun, sett nu-...:.:.-m I-nnu 12011 the truth. voufsuddenly shone he began 1115 auuxy. Au. uu a . u ~ . . . .- | 9 u - - -- -~ 7 . Maddox may tell the truth. Y011!"suddenly through the ames, a 1` |I-Ionor. when he says that Clary stat- ; burnished, angry orange disk. The ` ed he expected trouble. The truth of throngs upon the beach gasped in the matter is that I never dreamed of . sheer delight at the spectacle. She !` such action until my Wife came to me 1 found herself suddenly in the midst of 1 at Mango Key, several miles from the ' a group of friends. Mrs. Copper Clary ` bridge over Seminole _Creek, and in- was among them. ' formed me that she had learned of Aren't you proud of Tim?" the the proposed assault upon my property plump matron asked. 2 rights. Naturally. it being a matter of "He seems to be a, good business vital importance that the bridges be man, she rejoined. ` left standing, I, with my wife and Dr. Business? I m not think of busi- Fergus Faunce, went by boat to the ness! Look at him, my dear!" cried - bridge in question. |Mrs.C1ary. I threw a couple of men off the: Look at him? Where is he? asked bridge, and challenged Maddox and Lucy. .v_ __:.1 44...; 1..- U`I _`I'n7e kman nvnrvmhnrc-' inst nowl Driuge 1x1 quI:uuu. `. "I and I his gang to take me. He said that he , was an officer of the law,-I think I that he called himself sheriff, which` was an untrue statement-but I felt 3 L that he was not enforcing justice and c - refused to yield to arrest. The man is x truthful enough, so far as he goes, 1 your Honor, but he doesn't go far It enough. I do not believe that he was '. bribed by Mr. Clary, but I have rea- son to believe that he owns certain acreage adjoining what was, until this morning, the Clary properties, and be- 1 Illeve that the value of his holdings I 1 would be enhanced by the destruction ` = of my bridges. You might ask him, - up [your Honor. if -my surmise is correct." M ..-.u..- ...a....u.+.A nu I-.mth nf the I 1 ( {your J.'lUlUL, H. An; uu.u....... .. .. ._ . I Maddox admitted the truth of the `surmise. reluctantly. The man was? `stubborn: Clary had tried to call mm 011. and now he began to regret his` stubborness. I-Ie regretted it still more 3 `when Devil-May-Care took the stand. | `For she not only corroborated her hus- band's testimony, but remarked that; gtwenty men had shown an exceeding reluctance to attack two, which state- ment brought a laugh from the crowd- "ied courtroom. . mu...o .....1.A Pkg rnthnr nut. nmneed- ed courtroom. That ended the rather flat proceed- lngs: the Judge reprimanded Maddox `for toozealous conduct and discharg- ed Stevens. n-u.........k Han nu-nan Tim anipd hm. ed SECVGRS. Through the press Tim guided hxsl wife; the pressure of his hands--eith- er was big enough to inclose her bi- ceps--was strangely pleasant upon her esh. She was seeing, she thought, a new Tim, a..'I`im that had never exist- ed in the days when she had mocxed. him. derided him. u\pu..1. n\\`IrI1:u-I 7.11011 " ho Quid QQ mm. uenueu nun. Much obliged, Lucy," he said, as they gained the street. 1:`. hnmnrl tm-mad rm his heel. and} may gaxneu lam: succu. . He bowed, turned on his heel, anal left her. She entered her coupe and drove slowly across the toll-bridge, to . Palm Beach. At Bra.d1ey s she turned into the courtyard, parked her` car, and entered the Casino. _..__.u :__.u-..L-.: aka! . \ AFTER forty, watch out for winter ailments. Cod-liver oil. the natural food- tanic, in wonderful -Qn.4u6u:1\n Tuba : uuu cuucniu vus; vumauu. I Gambling seemed indicated. she] wanted something to restore that wild ' uncertainty of racing blood that had been hers last night when she started from the Everglades Club. that had been hers half an hour ago in the street before the courthouse. ,. 1.1.- .._..1..LL'.. ...u\-.- DIILFUU an-av-V u--u V -. --_-.._-. As she approached the roulette room she saw young Leeson. with him was Elsie Darragh, a dimpling, smiling. Joy-radiating Elsie. She seized Lucy by the hands. IIVnII rn thn first to KIIOW." She by me nanas. You're the first to know, breathed. Just now I reached for some chips, and my hand touched Jim's, and, with the croupier looking ~ was surprised at his ab- _- .....1.. 1.... THERE GOES THE- TELEPHONE... EXCUSE ME,90Y$; wg-u:.F_ 1 AN'~t.wER. 1n- among Lucm. arty .-of He u__ ._-__u 1-....I- ..L 1.4.... Can`! Anon-I" rn-{AH BIll\\rp Chery Creek School Report Sr. IV-G1a.dys Clement. Dora Mc- Ewen, Temple Watt, Bill Manning. 1.. 1 1Y__`lA ort1 1\'nr1-it `Rncc-in Rrnii-`h ZSWEII, Lcmpxc vv a-uu, uun u.a.u1uu5. Jr. IV-Mary Morris, Bessie Smith, Wilda Grose. Norman Harrison, Mar- jorie Browning. cs TTT...Rnf.h I-Inches. David Smith, JUNE Dru w rung. Sr. III-Ruth Hughes, David Smith, Evelyn Lowry, Marian Copeland. Jr. II--Grace Allan, Molly McEwen. H '- George Kneeshaw, Howard Stewart, Warran Kneeshaw, Betty McEwen, Jean Watt, Keith Browning, Alvin Morris, Eileen Browning. . B. 13.. .I`_1n-in I/I :-nnar 'RTa1nr-11 `Rana: '|su.u. -.- ...__-.. __-- . 'i Lucy kissed the girl. She helfdwout 3 " her hand to Leeson. That young man I was blushing, but his eyes were cold. she could read his thoughts. They 1 said, You played with me, found out - Hwhat you wanted to know, used me, {betrayed me. I'm afraid of you; you're 7 :not my kind, I need something tamer, ' I've got it. -1 Gina nhnnui nn`hn,nni'lv, for half an ivul I9 swiv-auvuv A FOOD AND TONIC TOO IcatthBowno.`l`unnh.0nt. 848 J. `on, !him!-he_asked me to marry him. 1 , 1..-1,: _..L Ive got M4. 1 , She played, unhappily, for half an hour. Why should other people be happy and she unhappy? For Leeson would be happy, despite the thoughts lwhich she had read. He would forget it-the memory of Lucy in the reality of E1sie-Heigh-ho !- PHI-\n 1:.-imlnn-c 1: nn firs: " she: heard Lcommnea. setting over Lake Worth,` I` ' suddenly flames, - g fvthrongs upon f.sheer She! e - _..._.... -: c-..1....a.- `lrc nnnnnr (`Elm-v 31516--ne1g11-nu:- The Brakers is on fire," she heard the croupier say. Your 1uck s bad, anyway. Better not buy any more 5 chips, Mrs. Stevens. Look at the re!" A AA- --...- ..1..........& Ac bkn 1nnO-`hh-ma- Uluya, avua. uvyvyuu. navvou mu .-... -_- As she came abreast of the bathing- casino, she gasped in sheer delighted `amazement. For the flames were ;shooting up into the air, seemingly `hundreds of feet, illuminating the :whole vast building. Vesuvius. in er- uption could hardly be more beautiful, more awe-inspiring. I u- ....... ....eoA nn mm gpnmed sad. I awe-inspiring. I ` No one cried, no one seemed sad. A `That was the marvelous thing about ; the catastrophe. In few other places in the world could people have faced `disaster so philosphically. But thesel !were of the nation's wealthiest. Their losses would not -be crippling. Even the ,hotel company would lose nothing. It ?could sell the land on which the `Breakers for ten times the ori-` land and buildings I 1.1.6 uccu CVCLJ vvsA\. he's on that roof--see?" I 7...... 1.m1...A TTr\nn H he's Bnar, roux-sec: Lucy looked. Upon the cottage ad- ` M joining the north wing of the breakers t crouched men. white cloths, doubtless water-soaked, covered their heads; they played streams of water upon i this building to whose roof they clung. ' They fought the fire as one might `fight the living assault of savages. .a..___..-.1 ____ nit r\r\n1' aha uguu Lu She had advanced nearer now; she could pick him out of the others on the roof, by his. cat-like agility as he moved about. Oh, my heavens! why didn't he come down? What right had he to risk himself there? He was married, and there were plenty of younger men to take chances. Some had climbed one of the ladders,` Ac JAVAAA5 uu-a.~..... -- -_.._.9 6 v one 1 1 1 was beside Tim, was speaking to him. 3 `It looked, from the way he held his aface close to Tim, as it he were whis- , E pering, but Lucy correctly guessed that ]he was screaming at the top of his vllungs. In no other way could he be ` heard above the roar of the flames. She bumped into Leeson and Elsie ' Darragh. The girl was flushed with excitement, and Leeson was hardly '_ less aroused. He showed a magnani- ' mity of which she had not believed ' him capable. (Though why should she have judged him harshly?) 5| unmnm-a+u`ln1-.inn= nn having 3, man I nave Juugeu nun um auA_y : ; Congratulations on having for a. husband, Mrs; Stevens!" he said. .7 4_.L _._-1- Fl lv$rlJ\lI-lo I CBC I B theeasyway--plcaa~ nnt!yavored,digeo- ble, full of energy. L` Auc JUII yLAA1uu Examiner office. `is on STOMAGH as nnmuanous Gas, pain, bloating and sourness af- !ter eating almost always mean too much acid in the stomach. The con- dition is dangerous. Acid irritates the stomach lining and may lead _to U1- cers. Gas forms and presses against the heart. The stomach needs an al- ` kaline. Bisurated Magnesia-powder V or tabiets-is the ideal method of get- ` ting safe, quick, lasting relief. It neu- V traiizes the excess acid, sweetens the ' stomach, breaks up the gas, stops the pain and soumess. Food digestsAnatur- , ally. It must give prompt relief or r money back say druggists everywhere who sell it on this iron clad guaran- ` ` RSI Icy. 1 He's been everywhere; just now ._ _.. LL...L ..n.-.4` 4-ago" - Fine job printing of all kinds at The Running: nifhnn nuuu-...., -._-_. .. . - (Continued next week) |I...'j",..`:n;;;..".;:.:. 1 ,1 _,,,.__....|--L.-_ DUI: I) Fai1e;d- old 40. III` 40. I Middle School, Form III `S Class I-Honors--Jas. Ferguson 77. Class II--Wilma Montgomery 73, =c` Earle Clute 72, Mary Heasman 72, I Florence Ferguson 71, Louise Gilmore! 70, Charlie Burton 68. Margueritte i [Terry 68, Evelyn Black 66, Eileen Co1- lumbus 66. _'J -v--- TT1 __.rn-(Inn Rnwat 63. Ken- S `umbus 66. E Class III-Gordon Rowat 63, psi: neth Spring 60, Belva Trace 60, Jean! Christie 60. Credit-John Bell 59. Noah cotton`. 59, Doris Grigg 59, Louis Couse 58.] Alex. Andrew 56. Milton Trace 55.11 Graham Whitton 55, Minnie Bell 54, 3- Graham Christie 53, Leonard Coe 51, '1 George Elrick 51, Glenna Downey 51. F. _ Fai1ed-Margaret Columbus 49. Mar- TL , gzaret Ritchie 49, Joseph Clute 48. Geo. `p : Nightingale 48. Margaret Stone 47,; I S6 > ', Orpha mcknng 46. Thos. Stone 44. C Upper School, Form IV .A 3 Class I--Honors--Ina McQuarrie 80, '1 Ruby Hart '77. ' ~ C 5 Class II-Mossie Draper 74-, Vernon i Rowat 70. 'I'._ ah.-. ah/-urn FIQQQ standing the. Rowat '10. I In the above class standing the, highest scholarship students who de-| serve special praise are Margaret, Tripp : 85 per cent., Form 1: Ads. Bell 81 per cent., Form II: Ina McQuarrie 80 per I cent., Form IV; Janmes Ferguson '77 per cent., Form III. :..hnn1 n=-nnened on Monday. Janu- 1 cent... norm 11.1.. I School re-opened Monday. lary 6, at 9 a.m. (Too late for last week) ` Dec. 31-Jack Lawrence of Saskat- 1 chewan is visiting his brother, Harry 1, Lawrence. I `xx-.. u-......++ Ac 1\i1-`Hand i: snpnding Lawrence. I Miss Bennett of Midland is spending . a. few days with friends here. sun..- Kr.-.m1nm-nu Hm: `Inr-1:1 1 l=n.(`.}`H-`-1`. re- I IBW (lays wuu u.u:uuo nu... [ Miss Newberry, the local teacher. re- turned to her home for the holidays. 1 Miss Viola Moore of Stayner visited her aunt, Mrs. Ford. last week. 11.. ......a Mr.-c WA `Dnddinnn atfpnd- her aunt, Mrs. row. ms wccn. Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Paddison attend- ed the funeral of the late Chris. Pad- _dison, the farmer's uncle, in Stayner last Monday. at... x1 1:! `Ala:-chn'|'| cnnnf. 9. few last Monday. Mrs. N. E. Marshall spent 9. few` days in Toronto last week. Ff`!-an nnnnrnnnifv mac chnnked t0 hear days In `roronw Last, wccxx. The community was shocked to } of the death of Mrs. Marshall's father, Mr. Lennox, in Creemore. on Sunday. 5-A-~ Han -nan knau vicifnrs N11 . LIEIIXIUX, Lu. LJICCHIUAC. Uu Among the many holiday visitors were: Misses Florence and Marguerite Cole of Toronto at A. Cole's: Arthur Martin of Beeton at his father s home; Geo. and Harry Lawrence, at home; Jim Mather of Toronto and Miss Hil- da of Guelph at Jack Ma.ther's; Miss Elizabeth Matthews with her parents: Norman Armstrong of North Bay with his mother; Miss Elsie Conn of Shel- burne, Emma of Toronto and Will and Hugh of Kingston, all at their home here; Miss Marjorie Switzer of Craig- hurst with her parents; Miss Edith Macham at Robert Macham`s; Harold Booth of Toronto at his home: Percy Rowe of Stayner under the parental roof; Mr. and Mrs Thompson, Mr. and Mrs. MacMillan at Jas. Prosser s: Evelyn Carter of Sault Ste. Marie. at Geo. Carter s; Mr. and Mrs. Morley Carter, at Robt. Carter's: Miss Ruth Morrison, at her home; Mr. and Mrs. Kyle of Creemore, Miss J. Stainton of Toronto at W. P. Stainton s: Miss Jean Gordon of Collingwood at John Gor- don's. xauuuuq . William Kelton, Eng., was evicted : which his family years. `I2-zn-nn fichznr T1 1'5: Baron Gustav Dorschen of Berlin was convicted of stealing a. necktie I1-om a. fellow lodger in a cheap lodg- ing house. 13:11" 'L1I..\-.4. -0 at...-...u.1 km! 4: nar- 1.115 uuuac. Billy I-Ilghts of Montreal had a nar- row escape from death when his wood- en .1eg caught re and burned as a re- sult of a collision with a. motor truck. I a-Ma.yme Ritchie 46, Roy Arn- ` NEW LOWELL , 69. of Coalville. from a cottage in had lived for 200