HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance Times, 1926-12-30, Page 3GORRIE NEWS Almighty God, our Heavenly Fath-
A quiet wedding was solemnized .ez•, who didst send ' Thy _S.on to call
at the Gorrie pa•sonage:on'Christmas sinners to repentance, grant that we
day, when Ruby E. Sharpin, only may heed the call, that our sins may
daughter of Mrs. M: Sharpin, and the be washed 'away, our souls purified
late Mr, John Sharpin, became the ,be
our minds made like unto His
bride of Earl E; Harper of Gorrie.: who came not to be ministered unto
The ceremony was performed by Rev, but to minister. Grant that we, fol
Fr?d W Craik at five o'clock, The at -
dents were IVIi•s, S. Wade of Wrox-
er.and Mr, Gordon Harper of Tott-
'iigham. The bride wore a dainty
gown of poudre blue crepe de chene,
After the ceremony, the bridal party
returned to,•the home of the bride's
mother, where a wedding dinner.was
served. Mr. and Mrs. Harper left
on Monday for t honeymoon trip to
Tottingham. On their return they
will reside in Gorrie. Congratulations!
1VItr, and Mrs. Milton White of by proclaiming the "good news" that
Chatham, spent the holiday at the the Kingdom of God was at hand.
, home of Mr, and Mrs, :Rout, White; This 'gospel' was to be more and
of Gorrie, more definitely concerned with the
Mr. L. Jones of Toronto, spent the
holiday with his brother, Rev. S.
R. Jones, at the rectory.
The Christmas services were well
atten ed in the United church last ery creature. Therefore it was ab -
S " It1 The phad charge of solutel necessary that He should at-
bii pastorY
themef disciples
t e band o
1h morningHimselfa
t 1e r; 'ccs. Thetach to
'�4,
was,' "Thou Shalt Call His Name Eni- whom He could teach and train to be
rnanuel," The choir rendered three His witnesses and messengers. Accord
appropriate selections. A baptismal ingly at the very opening of His min -
service was also held. At the ev- istry, He invited four men to be his
ening worship, among .service was held' personal companions• and attendants
'The scene of this call is declared to
be by the sea of Galilee.' On the
shores of this lonely island lake most
of the teaching of Jesus was given
most of his miracles were performed.
On its western and northern sides
were the, cities in which most of his
mighty works were done; the east-
ern side was not inhabited, and
thither Jesus would resort to escape
the multitudes.' (Erdman).
The men first called by Jesus to.
follow Him were fishtermen. Walking
one day by the sea, He saw Andrew
and 'Simon Peter at their work. 'And
Jesus said unto them, Come ye after
me. and I willmake you to become
fishers of men, and straightway they
followed Hint.' Soon after He saw
James, the son of Zebedee, and John
his brother, and summoned them
also. 'They left their father Zebedee
in the boat with the hired servants'
and went after Him."
It is not to be supposed that these
men ltnew nothing of Jesus before
-Their call. Jesus had been pointed out
Wylie, Toronto, Miss Doris Baker, to them by John the Baptist and
Stratford; Miss B. Ashton, Dutton; they had followed Jesus then, and
lowing otic"' Saviour, and learning of
Him, may so! exalt Him in our lives
that others, through us, may be drawn
to His feet. This we ask in Jesus
name. Amen.
S. S LESSON FOR JAN. and, 1927
Lesson Title -The Christian a Fol-
lower of Jesus.
Lesson Passages—Mark x:16-zo;
2:13-17 and 1. John 2:6.
Golden Text -Mark 2:14.
"Jesus began His public ministry
person .and work of Jesus. His earth-
ly career was to be brief,, and it was
His ` purpose to have the gospel
preached in all the world, and to ev-
whten'Christmas ,carols were sung.
Mr: and Mrs, Ihsaac Wade; Mr,
Mr.. and . Mrs. Isaac Wade, . Mr.
ert, also Mr, and Mrs. D W. Dane,
and son Whitney were guests of Mr
and Mrs, J. Myles of Toronto.
Miss Margaret Newton has return-
ed front Toronto, and expects to com-
mence trainnig for the nursing .pro-
fession early in the year.
Put in a pleasant evening "New
Year's Night," in Gorrie Hall. See
the play, "Fickle Fortune," under tilt.
auspices of Gorrie Ladies Aid.
Services appropriate to the New
Year will be held in•the United church��.�
next Sabbath at ' rs a,ni, and 7 p•i
Chrstmas service was field in the St.
Stephen church, Saturday morning,
Rev. S. R. Jones in charge,
Dr .and Mrs McGuiness of Ford-
wich were visitors in,. Gorrie for the
holiday.
Amongthe ,visitors in Gorrie. for
the holiday were: Mr. Art Stephen,
Toronto; Mr. Emerson Shera, De-
troit, Miss Edith' Vanstone, Jas.
Mr,C. Hillborn, Hamilton; Mr. and
s. J .Gamble, of Sask.
I,.`>'eral from here attended the; suc-
u1 Christmas eco
concert
held
in :Or-
ange Church, Thursday the 23rd.,
Mrs. E .Jones, Brighton, mother of
Rev S. R Jones, of St, Stephens. rec-
tory, is visiting in Gorrie.
tan
rnv►
nb�t
SUNDAY AFTERNOON
)'esus calls: o'er the tumult
Of •our life's wild, restless sea,'
Day by Day his sweet voice soundeth,
Saying, "Christian, follow me."
As' of old Apostles heard it
By the Galilean lake,
Turned front home, and toil and kin-
dred,
Leaving all for His dear sake.
Jesus calls us: by Thy mercies,
Saviour may we hear Thy call,
Give our hearts to Thy obedience,
Serve., and, love Thee best. of all.
Cecil Frances Alexander.
had spent some time with Him
apparently returning later to their
homes and work. Now, thiey are rea-
dy at His call to leave all and follow
Him.
The next man ' called to be a dis-
ciple was of a very diferent stamp.
Erdman says: "The fact that a man
was a publican or a tax -gatherer, did
not prove him to be a sinner, but at
ie r
least it placed• him under suspicion
�
and debarred him from fellowship.
with respectable and reputable men.
He was tie agent of a system which
depended large upon extortion and
fraud."
Like .other residents in the district
Levi or Matthew, had had opportun-
ities of seeing Jesus and hearing Hine
teach: What thoughts filled his
mind, what aspirations had been stir --
ring within him, what resolutions he
had formed we cannot know, ]3ut he
too, was ready when the call came to
arise and follow Jesus.
There are likenesses between the
call of theh disciples and call which
comes today to .men and women to
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te
■ HIGHEST PRICES PAID FOR RAILWAY TRACK AND BM
M SWITCH TIE TIMBERS IN HARD OR SOFT MAPLE, BEECH, in
MI BIRCH' CEDAR AND- HEMLOCK -No Elm Tie Timber saleable,
pi ANo. x Tie requires a xo in, diam. at small end. No, 2, 9'in.
R® Track Ties are 8 feet long,
® Switch Ties 8 ft. 6 iii. to 16 feet long,
® We are: buying Hardwood Logs in Maple, Elin, Basswood, I®
Birch, Ash, se and r4 feet long. Shaky Swamps or fence .corner Elm 'IN
not wanted at any price
� as
M CUSTOM SAWING WILL GET OUR VERY BEST ATTENTION
ill '
fa We carry a stock of Cedar Sahiplap, Cedar Boards, Hemlock
M Dimension Boards, etc, Also Cedar Shingles,
$
Ii>I
N I
teivemesiimiatimisitiorrammtentreiromt
NOTE --The Florida Tornadoes levelled every kind of
construction but those of wood and shingles. Stay with good
Lumber and Shingles,
Gibson Limber
i
,
Cider• Mills
V'Vroxrai:er, _ Ontario.11101111111111111111111111.11101111111111111111111111111111111
Thursday, December 3xst, 2926
roxetei
Monsters of a Million Years Ago
eseieeittic
ee,../..eNt.
•
View of "Dad Lands" of Alberta. (Inset)
The majority of tourists who travel across the open
• prairies on ,the. Canadian Pacific line east of. Cal-
gary, are unaware, as they look towards the north
that there is to be found anything to interest them
except t the prairies and prairie towns. But not many
miles distat from the ailway, where the Red Deer
River cuts through the prairie, lies a valley known
as the "Bad Lands." This is a valley beside which
the'- Rocky mountains are young—a valley whose
bottom -lands record that once they were an inland
sea along whose shores, millions and millions of years
ago, lived those walking, creeping, crawling monsters
known as dinosaurs.
Only ' with the discovery of the dinosaur skeletons,
and as a result of the numerous expeditions sent into
the Bad Lands of the Red Deer by the Government
and by museums both in Canada andin the United
• States, has the river valley taken on a wider interest.
Each season adds not only to the number of collect-
ing parties but also to the number of tourists who
are attracted by the picturesque character of the can-
yon and whose imagination is thrilled with the thought
of the age -long secrets which the valley is beginning
to make known.
When and how did these donosaurs live? What
was the world like during the time when they flour-
ished? How would this very valley have appeared.
at that time and what other creatures were to be
found there with them? Such questions :naturally
arise as the dinosaurs take on a larger measure of
reality.
At first one is likely to think of all these extinct
animals as merely prehistoric, living hundreds of
years, of course, before even Tut -ankh -amen, but per-
haps at the same time as our cave -dwelling ancestors,
with whom they may have contended for the mastery
of the. earth, ' The written records on which history
is based extend back, comparatively speaking, only a
few centuries; even the oldest, those 'of. Egypt and
Chaldaea, cover but sixty centuries. - The still earlier
periods when man lived in savage and barbaric tribes.
take ;us back only one hundred thousand years, and
as no fossil remains are found in strata of that date
it is evident that these huge reptiles had long been
Drn►ing of giant dinosaurs of, past ages.
extinct even -at that time. In bigness these dinosaurs
have never been exceeded. The herbivorous' groan
were the largest; they browsed on the rushy vegeta-
tion and among the ferns and bushes, or stood up and
grasped trees with their fore -legs while they devoured,
the foliage. Many of these were giraffe -like waders
whose long fore -limbs and immensely longer occas
enabled them to take refuge in deeper waters, mors
out of reach of the fierce carnivores of the land. The
Diplodocus, a herbivorous dinosaur whose skeleton is
in the Carnegie Museum, Pittsburgh, measures eighty-
seven feet in length, 'and a still more colossal ` orae
found later and known as Gigantosaurus measure:
well over one hundred feet.
The carnivorous or flesh -eating groups were not
so large they were more active, however, and preyed
upon the herbivores. Though equipped with frightful
weapons they were considerably inferior in intelli-
gence to the modern crocodile or 'lizard and far below
the bird or mammal. Of these, Tyrannosaurus seems
almost "the last word in frightfulness.", It reached
;the length of forty-seven feet, and in a standing posi-
tion the animal was eighteen to twenty feet high as
'against twelve feet for the largest African elephant.
The long deep powerful jaws were set with teeth from,
three to six inches long and an inch wide. '
To protect them from these flesh -eating dinosaurs,
many of the herbivorous ones were completely en.
cased in armor. Such as Aukylosaurus. Plates cov-
ered the skull, neck, back and hips, and even the bell;:
was covered by a pliable mosaic of small close -ma
plates. It was further protected by a movable plat_
that could be dropped like a shutter over each eye.
The Geological. Survey at Ottawa now has a .o-
markably fine collection of dinosaurian remains
mounted and on exhibition at the Victoria Museum,
Ottawa, and are also to be seen at the Royal Ontario
Museum, Toronto. The field has by no means been
exhausted. Under miles of prairie land the same
strata are undoubtedly filled with • similar fossils;
erosion is rapid, and as the river continues to weer
its banks away new fossils are exposed, For all time
to come the Red Deer River will be a classic locality
for collecting prehistoric treasures.
leave all and follow *Christ. Though Wright 4i. ronto with her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
it may not be always necessary to Sr, 3rd — Gordon Wright 70,* Lor- A. E. Gallaher; Mr. and Mrs. Fred
60*,r and
Edwards HarryEdwards 53. Westlake of Listowel with M .
abandon one's customary occupation, ne
still the call involves sacrifice, and Jr. 3rd -- Bertha Detzler 65,* Inez Mrs, Wm. Mitchell; Miss Eve,,, Mc -
sometimes separation from friends, Finlay 64*. Michael of Stratford Normal with her
There is always •the same need for Sr. 2nd Robert Ferguson 62. parents, Mr. and Mrs. Th)es. Mc
prompt obedience, the same need for Jr. 2nd —Alta Finlay 93, Mildred I Michael;. Miss Hazel Weir of Toronto
readiness to do Christ's bidding, and Dane 83,* Leslie Edwards 83,* Alber- with her parents, Mr. and Mrs, D. L.
there it, too the same promised re- to Ferguson 77, Mildred Stewart 75,* Weir; Mr, and Mrs W. E. Weir and
ward, "I. will make you . to become Mac Metcalfe 66*. .Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Palmer with
Sr. Pr. — Woodrow Dustow 77. Mr. and Mrs. Bush of Wroxeter; Mr.
*—promoted, and Mrs. A E. Gallaher and family
Elsie M. Cook, with Miss Ada Gallaher of Wroxeter;
Teacher. Mr. and Mrs. Jack Gallaher with Mr.
and Mrs. Ralph Metcalfe near Belmore
Mr. and Mrs. John McCreery and
family, and Mr. and Mrs. Webster
Jacklin from near Molesworth, and
A Happy New: Year to The Ad- Mr. and Mrs. Eadie of Glenannan
vance-Times and its readers. with) Mr. and Mrs. Charles Cathers.
Christmas visitors. are—Mr, Alvin Mrs. .Root, Taylor "is: at present
Wray and Miss Joy Wray of Toron- visiting friends in Detroit
to, with their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. John Gowdy spent one
John Wray, Miss Alba Gallaher of To- day last week with her brother, Mr.
. David Voyan, who Byes near Moles-
Il`IIl�iil lll�llli6lilalll®Ill�lllrlll�lll�lllislll0 worth.
The Sunday School entertainment
fishere of men. Every -faithful` fol
lowver of the Lord who carries out in
his life th!e teachings of the Master
may be the means of drawing oth-
ers to Him, so that they too may
become His disciples. •
The; enmity of the Pharisees had
been aroused in the ministry of
-Jesus. Now they found another cause
for 'complaint.
"Matthew, it --appears from Luke 5:29
made a great feast, thus testifying
his gratitude for the honour done
hint, and, that his friends andacqu-
aintances might profit by the teacling
of his new Master, he invited thein
to the entertainment that was hon-
oured by the presence of Christ,"
(Adam Clarke.)
C
The Pharisees therefore accused
Jesus of consorting with publicans
and sinners. Jesus calmly met their
accusation by a saying that has been
of unutterable comfort to sinful men,
"1 came, not to call the righteous, but
sinners to repentance,"
"So Jesus companied with sinners
not because He countenanced sin, or
enjoyed the society of the depraved,
but because, as a healer of souls, He
was most. needed tend to work. where
the ravages of sin were worst; He
came .into, the world to save sinners.
Their conduct:distressed Him, their
sine pained' Him, hitt to accomplish Li
His task He mast seek thein out, He
must show His sympathy by His
presence and His reeling touch,"
(Erdman)
IIId
SCHOOL REPORT a
SALEM
SURNAMli;9 'IrEEL TALES.
Surnames Were Adopted About the
Time of tate Norman r;oiH mast:
It was fiat until after the Neiman.
Canquest that Surnames we ee aoopt-
etl. They were first given. as nick-
m.011eF3 to Silt aarti.etzl�ii' in.diviclual3,
To -day we rarely died any appt"oprl-
a eriL.t,. in the
1 nr': i imam ehE
a•.ct
,.u,at- l)i 't7oi talive(tty may t; $iiy
t,, the eame Coward, while ,!•cit'.
t be anything but sly. Yet it,
i+rob }sic. that -Lite fires man to bear
u ,,e of Fox was pre-eminent in
,..-r;ineg, just as the first Parrott, or
...Ia.., was most likely a great
'mem' pecpio were named 'by rea-
a a;. nenseeseion: of dome qual-
::i.c'.i vas associated: with a par-
' 'Mo. animal, Hart, for instanee,
, ii/ a great runnere. and
1 .ate could. sing. As for the
t,ic,cess (robin redbreast) and
ei:1lls (woodwale, a woodpecker),
,:: ob_;.biy received their names
_men. the signs they favored outside
(leers.
:neer interesting names are
AV'lich plainly originated
he occupation of those who
m.i There is no doubt about'
z:;...: a, 1 < clger,. Herd, or I-learrt.
n ,enc the man who drove
neeugb over the acres; Swinftert
• d ewine; end Calvert looked af-
!;. • gni rc, • while Wethered was
wether herd,: and Goddard a goat-
-iei d.
The thatcher 'ilio roofed the
manors and hovels ofthe day was
,rohably Thackeray, but as his ma-
-.meals would vary, according to the
°;strict, his name would also vary..
Thus, where reeds were ' used he
• rouid be a Reeder, or, as we often
=p^'-1 it to -day, Reader. Or he might
named Hillier, because he put the
"hill", on a house.
The Millers, Millers, or Milners of
'n -day need be in no doubt as to
what their forefathers did. "Milne"
ems the old name for mill. The Smiths
ire also free t'rozn doubt, and so are
the Bakers, the Clarks, and the
=etchers.
R
ii" To Our was a decided success, the children do-
E.-- ing their parts well, also those who
• Many Customers !; helped wit1s the dialogues and drills
i and singing. The Vanstone Orches-
1
��� ®� 10 tra furnished some good music, and.
® p everyone present enjoyed themselves.
® `� �a��� aItd�
The proceeds were $35.00.
The following is theireport of tete
r S. N d ick.
work done hi S. •S o. I I ow ,
during December. ,
Sr. 4th .. Elms Finlay 614 Lily Ed-
wards .56.
Jr. 4th — Clara Detzler 72, ,)ack
imiumm ummaisimnut Ferguson 7x, Elva Dane 66; Harold
Prosperous •
New Year.
TENTH LINE HOWICE
Miss Doris Craig of Toronto is
P- :spending the holidays with her par-
eats: Mr, and Mrs. Win. Craig.
1 1 Mr. R. T. Donaldson, and Miss Hil-
da, spent Sunday with Mr, and Mrs,
Ni Stephen Donaldson.
1 Mr, and Mrs. Hugh McLeod, and
daughters, spent Saturday with friends
in Clifford.
Mr. Jim Williams is spending the
III
Davey s Step.
Wroxeter, Ontario M
CREAM AND EGGS 'PAItgisi
I'IiiIallaaciIMIII`a11111tionINri1antilliiNllian
holidays near Durham.
Mr, and Mrs. Sebatien Zurbrigg and
sons, spent Saturday with friend.
near Listowel.
Mr, Wes, Miller and little son Car-
son, Mr, Ernest Pike and Miss Edna.
Roberts, all of Mt, Forest, were Sun-
day guests with the former,s sister,
Mrs. Thos. Strong.
Mr. and Mrs. Thos. Pritchard and
daughters, spent Saturday with Mr.
FASHIONS IN TREES.
At Present Latch Is More Popular
Than Erer.
Eighthundred acres of the ancient
unrest of Wyre, in Worcestershire,
are being cleared of oak and planted
with larch and fir. This isnews
xiieh, if our great-grandfathers
cu.iid have heard it. would have
shocked them profoundly. ' A hun-
dred years ago oak was so badly
ns+i ded for the building of ships that
huge grants of land were made over
by the Crown to persons who under-
took to plant trees and sell the tim-
ber to the dockyards.
Yew was the most important of
ice: glish trees in Norman times, for
yew was needed to make bows; then
came oak and elm for shipbuilding,
and firs for making masts and spars
When iron supplanted oak in the
shipyards, larch, Scots pine, and
spruce were planted for the purpose
of providing pit props.
Year by year it became plain that
o valuable wag the m st valuab e o£he the
gllre,e woode because •of its wonderful
lasting powers, so mord taxon gale
Cations were made. At present larch
is more pqq�ular than ever; it is the
best sort of timbber for wireless mast.
When flying came in, deli wig in
great demand for building the frames
of airplanes, and it was seriously sug-
gested that large plantations of ash
would pay handsomely. But if any-
one did plant ash with this object in
view, he was doomed to . disappoint-
went,
isappointMent, for already metal is supersed-
ing even in the building of all flying
Machines.
w,it.e birch is grown for its use in
making cotton reels, and woods or
poplar are being planted in Scotland
to provide wood for British -made
matches.
Herring's Hard Life.
WROXETER
Mr. and Mrs, F. Van Velsor spent:
Christmas in Toronto:
Misses Mary and Jennie Howe;
spent Christmas holidays in Toron-
to.
Mr, John Paulin of Siincoc is 'is -
icing itis brother, George Paulin,
Miss Iona Van Velsor and Miss
Edith Earls are home from Stratford
Normal School,
Norman and iMis. Brandon spent
Christmas with Mrs. Brandon's par-
ents, Mr, and Mrs, Robert Stocks.
Mr and Mrs. T. W. Henry and
family, spent Christmas in Toronto.
Mrs. Thames Brown, and children,
spent Clisistmas in Toronto.
Thomas Jacklin has purchased the
M
property on Sanderson street from
Mrs, Geo, Wearing and will move in.
shortly, . .
A grand carnival will be held in th
Wroxeter Skating Rink on Friday me
ening, December 31st. ,
Some of those who spent Christmas
with friends'•. here were:—
r .and Mrs. s. PerryPatterson atterson and
child of Niagara Palls at Herb Fatt
erson's and other friends; Mrs, Grim -
d
shave and son, Detroit at A. J. San-
derson's. Mr, and Mrs.' E. Martin and
ch ' Toronto, and Miss Eleanor
Douglas at John Douglas's.
Bertha Smith, Mildmay, at Minnie.
Smith's; John Munroe, Toronto and
Miss Annie Monroe, S.t Catherines at
Mrs. Munroes'; Lawrence and Mrs.
Moffatt and family of London at
Bert Martain's and David Thomp-
son's.
Miss Kathleen Armstrong of Mun-
cey and David Armstrong of Wing -
ham High School with Rev. and Mrs.
Armstrong at the Manse; Mrs. Jas.
Dane and daughter Annie of Bun-
clody Man., at John Earner's; Russell
Moffatt with) his brother, Jim and.
other friends, Mr: and Mrs. Geo, Mac-
intosh at John Davidson's.
Mr. and Mrs. Ashton Morrison of
St. Catherines and Hermon Morrison
of Saskatchewan at .Mrs. Morrison's.
Mr. Albert Sanderson of Ignac, and.
Miss Elizabeth Sanderson at D. D.
Sanderson's.
Miss Elva Hupfer of Sudbury at
Robert Hupfer's.
Miss Bretha Smith of Mildmay i
a
home for the holiday.
Mr .and Mrs. Gannett is at present
in Clinton.
Mr. Kenneth Gibson of Hamilton
spent Christmas with his parents
here.
Lizzie SandersonLondon,
Liis z of Lond ,
is visiting with her parents here.
In point of food value, and as an
article of commerce, no fish equa: -
the herring. And no other fish i•:
the prey of more enemies or is more
defenceless. The herring's only_ hop::
of safety, in fact, lies in its num-
bers; no fish, not even the whale.
will risk meeting a shoal of herring.
To become surrounded by a moving
shoal would be to court certain death
from suffocation; for this reason the
herring's enemies attack a shoal from
the rear.
But it is in the spawning stage that
the herring suffers most. Out of the
31,000 eggs that constitute the nor-
mal herring roe, only twenty-nine
survive the hatching period. ieriod. T11x.
is
heavy mortality is due partly to un-
favorable breeding conditions and to
the depredations of the countless 1
creatures, from shell fish to cod, that
feed on the baering's eggs and larvae,
The spawning of the herring is one
of the unsolved mysteries of the sea.
Other species spawn at set times; the
herring often chanes its spawning'
season, for reason that has not yet
been discovered, .
A Substitute for Sugar.
If you find that you have to order
sugar more frequently than you like,
buy a pound.of alpha-anti-aldoxine of
perillal-dehyde, This single pound
will go as far as a ton of common
sugar. It is' made from the oil of a
plant known to the ,Japanese as
"Shico" and to the botanist as "Be-
rnie," and is two thousand times
si eeter than sugar.
It is not In the leash like any of
the natural sugars in etrncture, . al-
though It is composed of the same.
'elements— carbon, hydrogels, and
oxygen, the common elements of all
foods. Yet if the same number of
atoms of the same elements, attaehed
to one another in the same way, are
f re n posi-
tion,
def e e $ o
arran ed in a slightly Il
tion, the resulting compound is not
sweet at all.
Mail emir printing to the Advance -
and Nita. John Pritchard of Harris- i Times, we veil give it our pr(inpt at -
ton. tendon,
WROXETER CONTINUATION
SCHOOL
Lower School—Those who passed in
s
all subjects—Katie Waller, Iabel
Earls, Andrew Inglis, Eva Brown,
Margaret Gibson, Lloyd Cathers,
Daisy Stocks.
Those who failed in only one sub-
ject—Harold Durst, Dorothy Green,
Evelyn Hupfer, Edith Weir, Irene
Wright, John Laine.
Those who failed in two or more
subjects — Carl Fitch, Stewart,- Mtil
vey, Margaret Wright, Walker Hast
it, Walter Willits, Edward Gibson,
Jessie Hastie, Verde Newton, Jack'
Toner, Willie Timm, Jean Milligan..
Middle School—(a) Winnifred Rae.
(b)Marguerite Foster, Dorothy
Doig.
(c)Margaret Doig, Bessie Wylie, Ol-
ive Lawrence, Ewart Whitfield, Mar-
garet Davey, George Paulin, Archie
Edgar, Kenneth Edgar, Mnrdie, Ed-
gar, Aleck Hastie, Wilbert Franck,
Mervin. Stephens, Jean Sperling, Jini
N. her.
Sanderson. N. P Garret, Trac
FRED DAVEY
Village Clerk
Issuer of Marriage Licences
The law now requires the license be
taken out three days before the cere-
mony. .
Subscription taken for the
Advance -Times.
Clubbing ^s'as given
DR. H. A. MUTTON
Graduate of Royai College of Dental
Surgeons of Ontario
Gr University of Toronto,
Graduate of y
At Fordwich Tuesday and Thursdo
At Gorrie the rest of the week.
G, S. DAWSON
GORRIE
Director of Funeral Services
Motor Hearse or Carriage, whicirt
ever is required.
Phone xd
IdARRIt AXKINS
Pordwich, Ontario
Licensed Auctioneer for the Counties'
Of Huron tad[ Wellington
Mettle 10
Or Patterson's Hardware Sttirer„