Malvern Collegiate Institute - Muse Yearbook (Toronto, Ontario Canada)
- Class of 1932
Page 1 of 112
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 112 of the 1932 volume:
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X THE MCSE 2 C. F. WEEGAR D R U G S Prescription Specialist Corner Dawes Road and Danforth Grover 2613 Bonrsm Punta J. W. DEE, R.0. Optometrist and Optician Over 12 Years' Experience 2006 QUEEN ST. EAST Opp. Kew Gardens PHONE HO. 9397 Telephone for Appointment X-RAY I f l- I Il Dr. Wm. Cy McLean DENTIST HOward 8186 2104 Queen E. ut NVlnevn BARBER SHOP AND BEAUTY PARLOR AT REAR 708 KINGSTON ROAD GR. 2526 Girls Special Rates SAY IT WITH FLOWERS Now I lay me down to sleep. T. H' P. The lecture's dry, the subjects deep: FLQRIST If he should stop before I wfike Give me a push, for heaxens sake. 2556 DANFORTH AVE. ulcmfi-il: 7431 mu THE .l1l'SE Joe Occhipinti FRUIT MARKET 2592 DANFORTH We carry u full line of Fresh Fruits and Vegetables, Also Cooked Meats and Groceries. QUALITY AND SATISFACTION GU.-XR.-XNTI'II'IIJ For Quick Service Phone GR. 1603 We specialize in Christmas Cards for Schools and Colleges. Ask to see our new samples for 1932 before placing' your order. - Artistic Stationery Co. Limited 37-47 Richmond St. East - - Toronto, Ontario Best Wishes for Continued Success to the Muse From a Malvern Graduate e 11.8. LAPP, D.D.S. f Wally! fe 5 l ee 0 qw 1+ 1 v -B-BUCKHP - omven- Excuse ME OF'F'lCER,JUQlT A CASE OF H ICCQUGHS tem THE gg U S E THE Little Gray Shoppe 23532 KINGSTON ROAD DRESSES. LINGERIE. I-IUSE AND CHILDRENS WEAR Reasonable Prices H. J. REID Tailorand Furricr 2138 QUEEN ST. EAST PLAY TO WIN with UN OP XVORLD - FAINIOUS TENNIS BALLS AND RACKETS THE SKI-JUMPER oesacus fd, ' H15 HOUSE-1-H-i--' A E23 , 1 ,, Q-'F-, 2? XZ? E M I ff Alllllll kf qi-Z-. AH-llllll ff 'X if IIIIIIIII ISI--Ill ' '-9 1: ' - 415- x 5.1. assssssa. ,- flX, ' 'Ill 51. Q Q.- ' U46 I , ll EES Eli? 1Vl'eSJ e E E to NONE BETTER - Don't take our word for it but try our M A X H E A T Maximum Heat COAL and COKE and be Convinced McDermid Building Supplies, Limited 2679 DANFORTH AVENUE Gnover 1316 Under the spreading chestnut t1'ee The village smithy liesg He started to shoe an army mule And forgot to shoo the flies. iii Ik Ik Pk Who takes a sheet of flimsy tin, Immerses it in paint, Then puts a little engine in And calls it what it ain't,'? -JACK WILSON, QF. Pk wk BF Pls Miss Muirhead- How many combinations can be made out of B.V.D.'? Q HF Ik if HF Miss Sutherland- Priestman. it gives me great pleasure to give you 74 marks. Priestman- Give me 100 and have a real good time. HF if 14 wk Someone told us that Mr. Kerr thought he had left his watch at home and took it out to see if he had time to go after it. Ik Sk if Mr. Fisher- Failed again, eh? What's the excuse this time? Ted- Well, what could you expect 7 They asked the same silly questions. JACK FRASER SPECIALIZING IN MEN'S AND YOUNG MEN'S C L O T H I N G TWO STORES: 2634 Danforth 1556 Danforth i9'7l THE MUSE J. BRUADBENT GROCERIES AND PROVISIONS TOBACCOS AND ICE CREAM 109-11 Main St. ---- A Toronto Phone GRover 6836 It's the little things in life that trouble us: You can sit on a mountain. but not on a tack. IF Ik Sk PK Mr. Clarke to Florence- I used to teach your brother and sister, but they were all right. DF ik Ik FF McDaniel. visiting London for the first time, goaded to despera- tion by the incessant necessity for tips. iinally entered the Wash-room of his hotel. only to be faced with a large sign which read: Please tip the basin after using. I'm hanged if I will! said Mac, turning on his heel, I'll go dirty first! if Pk :Ei Mr. Brown- What is the possessive form of Mr. Smith '? Bright Pupil- Mrs. Smith. Pk wk FK FF Visitor calling at Dr. Fisher's house- Is your father at home? Archie- No, he's out giving an anaestheticf' Visitor- An anaesthetic! That's a big word. What does it mean '? Archie-Ten dollars. Ik Pk lk lk Rill Dalgleish- What foolish questions is Nourse asking the teacher now? n Art Curliss-- Oh! he's asking if you get a barking cough from eating hot dogs. COMPLIMENTS OF Dr. I. J. Metcalfe DENTIST Cor. Balsam and Kingston Road Grover S177 lssxj THE MUSE Wim if A COMPLIMENTS 7 of S .l S .D DRUMMOND FUEL fm,-Q Sm,-esp CO., Branch 902 Kingston Rd. Phone HU. 4849 2661 DANFORTH AVE. FIQH AND CHIPS Grover 1315 WE DELIVER Al Crocker- What are those holes in the fence for? Norm Allen- Those are knotholesf' Al- If they are not holes, then what are they '? 214 211 Bill Stewart- Why on earth is Johnny Standing in front of the niirror with his eyes closed? Laird H.-- He wants to see how he looks when he's asleep. 3 :if :if First Former- When is a strong nail weak? Second Ditto- When it is in firm. :If 22 211 51 Mary McGill- What are you thinking about 'Q ' Bill Boyd- NothingI Mary- Welll don't he so self-Centered. IIC Miss MacGregor, reading 21 story- 'Through the tiny window of the Cell Caine a bar of sunlight striking against the stone wall as though to brighten the captives clream.' Now. class. why was the poor man so anxious to look out '? Because he wanted to see who threw the soap, said the class as one man. THE Brighton Bakery KINGSWQQD Home of Quality Bread and Cakes The Home of Good Talking Pictures Made nn Promises Fresh Daily L. Polakotf, Prop. PHONE GRUVER 0145 1111 KINGSTON ROAD Grover 6911 258-1 DANFORTH AVE. l99l ,W Y BIKE MUSE COMMUNITY PHARMACIES Prescription Specialists 2576 DANFORTH GR. 1817 2354 QYEEN ST. HU. 4415 1568 DANFORTH HA. 6500 PROMPT DELIVERY REXALL DRUG STORE E. A. FOBERT' Butcher and ' Grocer H0ward 2143 Pedestrian-''Confound you, why don't you blow your horn ? Jack Cooke- Who do you think I am-Little Boy Blue ? if 'lf 'li 214 Cy- During the tea dance my suspenders broke. Lloyd- Wercn't you horribly embarrassed? Cy- Not very: you see, my brother had them on. vii as 24 St. Peter- How did you get up here ? Murphy- F1u. 'l- RV Marg. Spence Lrelating an experience with a tramp!- And then I fainteclf' Helen Routh texcitefllyj- With your right 01' with your left? 244 Clitheroe- Which of the Biblical parables do you like the best? Bill Baker- That one where somebody loafs and fishes. .,. rl: 1 Slow Waiter- Your coffee, Sir. It's special from South Amer- ica, Sir. Mr. Blakeley Ctirecl of waitingj- Oh, so that's where you have been I Chas. E. Power For G l , Cooking UNIQUE UH 'S Beachview Bakery Zlss Queen St. East 8711 KINGSTON ROAD I 1 is.-mn r-l-.1 imlsam and Mr-1,1-an WIC DELIVEIQ H'mla d S686 Telephone H0ward 0010 100 r 1 v ,AT .PV , ' j' J .-' ' nv 1 is-0' . ., . v. v, 4.2. f 1 F, 4: '4 4 : J Stop hurtmg Quickly, safely, you can end the of corns with Dr. Schol1's Zino-pads. They remove the cause - friction and pressure and heal the irritation. Cannot produce infection nor any bad after effects. Three sizes -for oo17np,.mllouses and bmmions. Get ahox today atyour druggist's or shoe dulefs. Cost but a trifle. CORNS, t for callouses and bunions Special shapes and sizes Q27Sch Il' 'no-pad 4 4.- 'NY x V, w. b ,x gn. ,vt . - -'Q -f . - .141-!1'?1 V i '- .' wr- 'AL ' '-fi ' , rift l'9.:'i-fE '??- ., u-.'ta, .Lx i -.f . ', . , ,. ,M U,-nr 1 V J .wif ., . I - -'K gaioma n llll BRIDGES THE PROBLEM OF S5HQl5FTlN PRI C E T may be motor oil, it may be -gloceries you requi re-whateyeri t is Eaton's cash price guarantee assures you of the fact that yours dollar could not have been used to a greater advantage elsewhere. A ' The Eaton Cash! Price Guarantee reads as follows:- On any bona fule instance reported to us of an article pur-A chased here which could have been bought and delivered for' less elsewhere 'En Toronto on the same day 'we guarantee to refund the dijfereme, plus WZ, of the price paid. 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Co RT THE MUSE EZ b iz sa RoyalG' of Chocolate io 1113 mgstgr Charles V Epain O delighted was Cortez with his dis- covery of Chocolate in the conquered land of Mexico that he hastened, in 1519, to bring home a quantity to his master, Charles V. lt made a great senfyaitlon and one enthusiast called it the food of the Gods . The Mexicans drink it with a mixture of maize and hot spices and without sugar. The Spaniards, too. made it thick like porridge and pungent with spices and it is st.ll served that way in parts of Spain. to this day. The Spanish grandees endeavoured to keep the secret of the manufacture of chocolate in Spain but were unsuccessful and it spread through the medium of monks to Germany. Austria and France, and some years later, to England. Cocoa beans lfrom which chocolate is manufacturcdl are now grown in many different tropical countries and there is a great difference in their quality. William Neilson Limited buy only the very choicest growths and have learnt through many years of experience just how to blend the best beans from different countries so as to get the flavour and quality that have made Ncilson's Choco- eilannfn 'tl late world famous. . - lv J if 1 'l I i I ll Mluc 2 .ii C , 1 THE BEST MILK CHOCOLATE MADE +51 T H' E .11 I' S If ,C-'91 , '12, f7'f ff fx' 15 5 .xii ... 'k1 ag x-if '1 7x7 Ihfgif-Tia S3 . K O, w L22 TL! l 'fi gli x ...-?:rTt- 7' X N' ,,1 iv Ttgirffncsrb t 415u -- 1' 'ffff ' ' T M' x' 1 1 Ax 'AWAY Mix xx ' I' ..'v.KgT T Q f' .TW A523z g .,f ,T.'1Wf T i M, Tg' ,W 1 V 'iw-'uhif .. f fa...,eV!:4eZ,,T1 v-,L uf , ,.,1,., L:.4,,3, -. , , ,1??9..,,4 ., ,f f A I' ' D il' 5 , ' -ri: T7Qa3'55.lZL?f, w :7 'g' 1 1'E . fT .lf V Aglifl' . ir? -'i7:- 1 - 'wc - W' 1 '- -. , ifzTH?,::::'l -1-f -I Q ,. ,qQl5:,Q!,. ' -, 'B' fb. fi, 'f'Q. '- 'f l 'i.g -,, 5.7-5-'X---X ' , Tv NH' I in v K V A -, W ' -54.5, 'f' A ' ' ff' Z -- :kilt-we '- S -se' 4 33 d i, - - ft g , T 'W O, - j i? W- -. 'Al'. 1 -Qkfi' K' . --5: -4 .h '-r 7 :f.k - f,-:LA ,V -F ' ir,-., 5 --'-1' ' - LK? v7-n X, 'A WH li 5, , .T .2 -.gs-f ,Q -4 V - .,5.f-1.-:' T,--ae,,2 ,i, , Lf i-1 .fL 7 -' -L-.5 -7-r-'--.'E..:U - Y- ,, --, ... -1. MALVERN FOLLEGIATE INSTITUTE TORONTO, BI.-XRCH, 1932 T71 THE MUSE ISI Kgggggg THE MUSE A MESSAGE FROM THE PRINCIPAL HEN this volume gets into your hands you will probably be thinking about the Easter examinations. Therefore, can I better use this space than by reminding you how to study, and by pointing out the difference between study and cramming? Cram- ming loads your brain with ideas partly understood and unrelated to other ideas in your mind. They are useless and soon fade from the memory. On the other hand studying consists of taking ideas, com- paring them with other ideas, and applying them. The first requisite for study is concentration. Probably more failures are due to lack of concentration than to any other cause. There is probably no student who has not the wish to learn, but there are many who have not suiiicient will-power to pay the price. Their Wish-bones are all right but they have weak Back-bones. They may strengthen their back-bones by thinking of the serious consequences of failure, by determining not to fail whatever the cost, by avoiding day-dreaming and by promptly checking mind-wandering. To aid in concentration you must be comfortable. Sitting at a table is better than in an arm-chair. You must avoid all distractionsg you must have a quiet room and see that there is no glare from the light. Next in importance is interestg in fact if the interest in the sub- ject is sufiiciently strong. concentration will follow. When reading make sure you understand the meaning of each section. Reproduce the thought in your own words, if necessary make notes. Before putting away the book reconstruct the whole lesson. re-reading any part that is not perfectly clear to you. Next to interest in the aids to study comes review-the daily review of each lesson taken up during the day. It will take but a few moments: you can do it on your way to or from school and during lunch periods. It is not what goes into your mind that counts, but what comes out of it. What comes out of it is your own and is the only part that stays in your memory. You have made it your own by thinking about it, by reconstructing it. and by giving expression to it. -CARL LEHMANN. E91 TH. fi .-lflfifi.-. .J THE STAFF Iy'fliiH1r-iz:-C'l1 inf luvnv BICNULTY .-lxsistuilf Editors RUTH Snizmnir IRVING PHILLIPS llomvrnx' BELL Ih'1ff1rln1wlf Eflitnrx Art .... ...... W1Li.1.n1 STICNVAI-l'l' Girls' Athletics ..... ....... R IADGE PRICE Stwial. ....., .......... I Domi: LEARIE Buys' Athletics ............... ROBERT PORTER H umnur ...... .... . .RALPH PITTIS Exchange ......... ........ E DWARD DICCLURE .1lfI1'ixnrg1 0j'1'iwvrs Miz. HURTON MR. TAYLUI: .llanzugers Husim-ss-linwL'f:1.As AUSTDN Adverti5ing4Gr.om:E WA'rsuN Cll'L'Ul21tlOll+FRANK Rook Ifurm Rvlwwsmlfflfirvs I. Spviiut-, li. Morin, O. Smith, K. Goodie, B. Fzi1'quh:i1', M. Graham, C. llfwm-i'. J. Nesbitt, M. Anderson, I.. Trory, J. Fui'co1'an, H. Finley, R. Buckhzim, G. 1 n-mu-, H. Meyers, C. Jones, E. Sheridan, G. Sanders, F. Cargill, I. Bloomer, .l. Vit-L-i'i, F. Mcflung, A. St-haiiiiler, S. St-holukir, R. Rownthwaite, J. Mk'Cl'll1l!11Oll, J. l mirr1, J. Harris, J. Latta, P. Lampert, G. Pearson. J. Armstrong, G. Sanders, J. 3ll'f.lUL'l', A. Ilmld, li. Stzinstii-lcl, M. Gutlfrey, T. Bennett, H. Gillis, N. Cotton, S. Wnlfi-, V. Westlake, A. Jaunhs, M. Tuye, J. Standing. A1l1'1'1'ffx.'lfy Sulivifrirs li. Fan-quliai', S. VVulfi-, K. Westlake, J. Latta, F. f'zxi'g'ill, J. Fcarn, R. Burk- hnm, ll. Rmvntliwaitc-, H. Vlziytun, J. f'oi'voi'ziii, J. Mcffrimmun, I-I. Finlay, I. Spf-ini-, la Stzinsiiulal, l.. Bird, A. VW-zithe'i'lJui'ii, K. Pittis, XV. Davidson, D. Bell, li. Sil Il2iI'fl. I. Phillips, J. Mc'f'luci'. :mi THE MUSE 'I - f Kr ' f! i 3 I in A. . 'T' -. n Q at b ev.: ff ' V k UIQ, S 2 5 'I :AJ I i IV I Lulmwl rvniiiiilixzilliaau I EDITOR APPRECIATION OW many of us ever pause to consider the greatness of the effort put forth in providing schools for us? We should realize that public funds make provision for our modern buildings, their furnishings and the grounds on which they stand. After the cost of construction comes the maintenance, and when we take into account the caretakers, the repairs, water, gas, electricity and the many other supplies we can realize somewhat the extent of the work, the time and money which is expended on us. The sum of the annual salaries of teachers and instructors would probably astonish most of us. We can understand by reflecting on the cost of this vast endeavour how great a burden our citizens bear so that we may be educated prop- erly. At present our public and collegiate schools open the way to all culture for every student disposed to pursue learning. In addition, we are given time and support to enable us to take advantage of this tuition. If we wish to discover just how fortunate we are to be given this opportunity to develop our abilities. we need only to compare ourselves to one who must leave school and go to work at an early age. Our days do not become tedious nor monotonous. At Malvern we have a very short school day, with frequent changes and varia- tions: we have several courses to choose from and are not forced by necessity to enter into something we dislike. This is only one example of the advantages we enjoy which one who has to begin earning his living without a fair education is deprived of. That is one side of the question-the parents' and the taxpayers'. We shall consider our part. In the first place, we are too easily satis- fied to take the matter for granted. Secondly, we are not always fair to ourselves. In return for these grants we should be consistent in our regularity and punctuality: our future depends on the founda- tion which we are now building and we should be only too eager to gain as much knowledge as possible while the time and place permits. The universality of education to-day as an integral part of the upbringing of youth embraces a field that far surpasses any earlier system and seeks to provide for the needs of our future. Moral train- ing is recognized as being the first aim of education and therefore our schools, especially our public schools, take the responsibility of teach- ing us the fundamentals of good citizenship. Scholarship alone does not command the highest prizes, but when connected with social and tlll E Tfifi' MUSE recreational activities as it is in our collegiates and colleges we are given a combination which results in the moulding of the character to recognize the liner things in life as well as training us for our vocation. It is our future. then, that our citizens are looking forward to. and no worthier cause was ever sponsored. Our thanks should be returned accordingly. -DAVE MCNULTY. A MUSE STAFF MEETING tOr. Dramatic Moments in the Life of a Great Magazineb ACT I Sccmm' Any Fifth Form classroom, provided that it contains two or more members ot the Muse staff. The teacher is somewhere out of sight. Time: The beginning of any period. The pupils are just entering. Enter Irving. He spies an assistant editor already in her seat. IRVING: Hey, Ruth, there's a meeting of the Elks this after- noon. RUTH fblanklyb : What do you mean, the Elks '? IRVING lpatronizinglyj : Why, the Mooses. RUTH lstill blanklyb : The Mooses-the Mooses-Oh! Ca great light breaks over her countenanceb. You mean the Muses! Dear me. how clever! I'll be there! ACT II Sccnc: The Committee Room. Time: 3.15 P.M. The members of the staff enter by ones, twos, et ceteras. Don't ask who come in together. We are sworn to secrecy. But anyway. we are all assembled finally. To save time and space. we are to be known in this only by our first names. If you wish to know the rest. please look on that page near the front of this magazine where the picture and all the names are. DAVE: The meeting will come to order. tWe know by his nifiglnagiinious smile that he doesn't really mean anything as cruel as a ia . THE OTHERS famong themselvesj : Buzz, buzz, buzz. DOUG: How's the advertising going, George? GEORGE: Just like a house on fire. Say. the money is pouring in! I'm going to call another meeting of the reps. to-morrow and tell them off again. ANONYMOUS: He's got four dollars so far and we'll probably have to have a Tea Dance to get enough money to publish the maga- zine. fNo one throws any chairs, but for a time there is danger.J FRANK: Hoy, isn't that subtllff DORIE: That's a fifty-cent Word. E121 T H E JI FSE' W Y g BILL: Well. who wants a red cover and who wants a gray one? IRV: How's the humour going. Ralph? RALPH: I don't know. Pretty dumb. But I got a couple of good ones to-day-. DAVE: Please address your remarks to the chairman. EVERYBODY: Buzz. buzz. ED: I've got a new magazine in the Exchange. DOT: How many words must I write on the Alumni? SOMEBODY: Seven hundred and fifty. GEORGE: Make it an even thousand, Little Woman. DOT: Oh. yeah? DORIE: Say. why don't you let Dave speak once in a while? GENERAL MURMUR: Gosh. we're sorry. Never thoughtl. DAVE: Well. I was just going to say this: About getting our pictures taken. We've got an appointmenti. Buzz, buzz. DOT: Is he blonde or brunette. Ruth? RUTH: I'll tell you later. DOUG: He quoted me a price on the printing and engraving. GEORGE: You explained to him that there was a depression? Buzz-z-z-. Enter Mr. Horton. Comparative silence ensues. ACT III Scene: Same Committee Room. , T:z'me.' About 4.30 P.M. DAVE fin a respectful silencel : Well, I believe we've discussed just about everything we need to discuss for to-day. Is there any- thing else that anyone wants to say? fSilence and many negative shakes of the headlsb from the staflib Then I move that the meeting be adjourned. Will somebody second the motion? SOMEBODY: I second the motion. Exit Mr. Horton--and bedlam breaks loose. CURTAIN. And now, Gentle Reader. as you may have already guessed. Mr. Horton is the hero of this little play. If it were not for his guiding influence and calming ability. bedlam would still be breaking loose and you would not now be reading the 1932 Muse. If you find anything in this magazine that you like particularly, give Mr. Horton a large share of the credit for it. If you find some- thing you don't like, why. blame it on bedlam for breaking loose. Besides, we had to make mistakes so that next year's staff would profit by them. 'And in closing, let me state that our Editor-in-Chief is also, for various reasons. the hero of this play. It's a unique drama, isn't it, Xvlth txvo heroes ? I13l I THE MUSE A STUDENTS COUNCIL USEFUL innovation for Malvern Collegiate would be a Students' Council. What is that '? you may ask. VVe will give you a detailed explanation. The Students' Council consists of representative members from each society and organization in the school. The president is selected by the teaching staff. the remaining officers elected by the members of the Council from among their own body. Two members of the teaching staff are included in the Council as advisory officers. This completes the board. The Students' Council could now take care of a large amount of work with which the staff is now heavily burdened. The office and teaching staffs have gladly borne these school burdens for a long period. They have willingly granted us their valuable time in organ- izing school activities. It is now time for the pupils to take up their own burdens, which the staffs have capably carried through the past years. and organize and conduct our own affairs. School entertain- ments, dances, plays, athletics. etc., would be controlled by the Stu- dents' Council. The Students' Council also could secure a greater degree of co-operation among these branches through the representa- tives of' the different organizations. For the numerous cases where discipline is required in school activities, the Students' Council forms a court of inquiry. Let us take a hypothetical case. The student stands before the seated judges who are to consider his breach of conduct. He assumes an outward appearance of nonchalance while inwardly he, if guilty. is quaking with fear of the impending justice which awaits him. He stands thus while the council study him in silence, giving him time to reconsider his plea. Information gleaned from his teachers and fellow-pupils regarding his character and work is read to the Council. The defendant is allowed tosay anything he wishes in his own defence. If he is found guilty, the transgressor may have to pay a fine or may be punished in such other way the Council sees fit. These courts would have a restraining influence on the pupils and would help to maintain discipline. They would be more effective than the court now operated by the teachers, for a student is always more deeply affected by the judgment of his peers than by that of his superiors. In its many branches of scholastic, athletic and social endeavour, Malvern would be greatly benefitted by a Students' Council. -IRVING PHILLIPS. I 14 fl THE JIFSE MEMORIES T IS with sincere regret that I pen these few lines, for they seem like a message of farewell to the school where I have spent my time for the past live years. I won't say that those five years have not been without trials. No one who had sat for approximately one hundred and forty-three examinations and innumerable tests during his course could possibly make that assertion, but I will repeat the age-old phrase that they certainly have been the happiest days of mv life. It is with a secret smile that I can now recall tasks of school life which at one time or another have caused me considerable worry. I think I may safely state that the prominent place among this group is occupied by the history orals which were required of us daily in First and Third Form. My days at this period seemed to me a culmination of all life's hardships, the time before the famed orals being spent in nervous apprehension and the after-hours in recuper- ating. However, school life has brought about many friendships and has provided many pleasures and good times, the memory of which I shall always treasure. And no matter how steep the path has seemed. how dark the way has loomed ahead, the teachers have always been at hand to give unstintingly of their time and knowledge and to pilot us over the sea of learning. When I leave Malvern. I know that I finish one chapter of my life. a chapter filled with cherished memories of my association with the school, and I'm certain that even the time will come when I'll long for those glorious, light-hearted days when history orals were my chief anxiety. -DOROTHY BELL. E regret the absence of a section labelled Form News from this year's MUSE, for we had fully intended to have such a sec- tion. Unfortunatelv we did not receive enough contributions lol make it worth while. We did not hear from some of the forms at a . The first formers who contributed are to be heartily praised for their attempts. We hope the same people will help uphold second form in next year's magazine. Form 3C is deserving of special com- mendation for their contributions, and the response from some of the fourths was gratifying. But if an award were to be presented to the form which has given us the best co-operation with consistently good and pleasingly varied contributions ever since we first asked for them, that award would go to form 2A. The contributions of 2A have brought many a happy smile to an editorial face. E151 THE VJIFSE - We wish to thank Bob and Jim Buckham especially for their splendid art contributions. some of which are appearing in this magazine. Although we could not have a regular Form News section, still, some of the contributions were too good to let go to waste. Conse- quently they may be found throughout these pages. A It has been the object of the various MUSE staffs for several years back to have a Form News section. and we believe that we have come closer to having one this year than the others did in previous years. We present our apologies and explanations along with our hopes that next year's staff will at last realize this ambition. We have been particularly fortunate this year in securing a con- tribution to our magazine from the popular writer Gregory Clark. lYe wish to express our appreciation to Mr. Clark for his most inter- esting article. Our old friend Ted Reeve gives us his usual write-up. which we all regard as one of the most enjoyable features of THE MUSE. We are very grateful to Marjorie Beer and Hasel Hammond, both graduates of Malvern and past editors of THE MUSE, for their assist- ance in making the magazine a success. We also wish to thank the many others who gave of their time and knowledge to help us produce a MUSE worthy of Malvern. -DOROTHY BELL. LETTERS T0 THE EDITOR Dear Editor:- The easiest practice in the world is to criticise present methods, but when you take Algebra every day you welcome something easy, thus I send in my letter. I think that inter-form sport is not encouraged enough at Mal- vern. I know there is a certain amount of competition along these lines among some of the girls' classes and a few of the boys' classes, but it is not general. A schedule of games should be drawn up in which all Forms should have a place. We could have basketball and hockey in fall and winter respectively. A baseball schedule could be started in the gym after the ice had disappeared. This could be continued outside when the weather became warmer. Pennants could be presented to winning teams. to be held for a year. This house league would promote good-fellowship, give many students a chance for healthful exercise and fun which they other- wise might not get, and also give us material for interscholastic com pci ition. A -JOE PITT. l16l THE MUSE Dear Editor:- Every year the Muse staff is chosen from Fifth Form and their term of office is one year. Any of you who have ever had anything to do with editing a magazine will realize just how much work it is when one has had no experience. I think that the senior members of the staff should be from Fifth but I think the junior editors should be chosen from Fourth Form. They should be elected with the idea of being the senior editors the following year. In this way you always have someone on your staff who knows what it is all about. I hope that due consideration will he given to this problem in the picking of the next Muse staff. -D. L. Dear Editor:- I have desired for some time to express my views regarding the annual school song. Due to this practice, the school has never devel- oped a traditional anthem. In my opinion, the prize-winning song written in 1931 by Miss Barbara Roberts should be instilled in the hearts of the First Formers till it becomes a very necessary part of their school lives. The upper school students should familiarize them- selves with it. It would be one more link in the consolidating chain of school spirit. The Maids of Malvern could continue to enter the yearly con- test, but I believe the song mentioned above should be made a school tradition and should become as sacred to the students as the Varsity Alma Mater to the University of Toronto. I heartily advocate this and believe and hope that those in author- ity will sponsor it. I would like to see something done in this line before I leave school in June. -A FIFTH FORMER. Dear Editor:- Say, why don't you have a column or two of notes, etc., from, for or to each Form-from 1A to 5Z-you know, to console the First Formers, who might tlike I didj thinkt?J that the Hon. Muse was written, published and owned and read by the old-timers only. -2A. Dear Editor:- When I attended Public School, I once looked into the Daily Register and saw printed there that for the opening exercises every morning there should be read a suitable selection from the Bible, then the Lord's Prayer should be repeated. I am glad to say that up to the Third Form this form of opening was carried out, but for the last two years all we have done, unfor- tunately, is to repeat the Lord's Prayer. I do not think this good old custom should be considered obsolete. Yours sincerely, HROBESPIERREH. I 17 l E .li1E.,Blg'.Q-...c..-.iw I use JUST ONE MORE CHANCE By Gregory Cl-ark HAT shall I write about? I asked the editor of the Muse. Anything you like. said he, easily. Yes, but you're the editor. It is up to you to give the assignment. I How about this? he said, sitting forward with a jabbing finger, and all he needed was a cigar stub to look like Lou Marsh. How about-'If I had my high school days to live over again'? Sold, said I. If I had my high school days to do over again, now that my Har- bord days are twenty-live years behind me-texcuse me! Malvern was out in the country then: you don't mind if I went to Harbord, do you'?I I would do again many of the things I did. But I would play some game. I never played any game at Har- bord. Not even hookey. But now that I see the men around me, I notice that those of them who played games are not as lit physically as I am. They seem to have spent too much energy when they were young. Furthermore, most of them have a sense of the Manly Thing, the sportsmanlike thing, which I lack, and it gives me a fearful ad- vantage over them. If I had my chance over again, I would play rugby or hockey or something so as to be even with my fellow men. I hate to have the bulge on them like this. Then I would pay more attention to mathematics. The only way I got through mathematics-oh, well! Why tell such things. This isn't confession, and anyway I am a continuing Methodist. But here I am, nearly forty years old, without the slightest logi- cal sense whatever. And in a world filled with logic, with people whose brains work smoothly on the principle that a X b : c, I am terribly handicapped. They all said that what goes up must come down, and, like a fool, I believed them and did not spend one cent in the stock market. So I never had 350.000, as all the other fellows did, the ones who were good at mathematics. It would have been nice to have had S50,000. I said. have had. I had my chance, when I was young, to take a business course at high school. But I missed it. I would take that business course now, if I had a second chance, because everybody who knows about business knows what is wrong with business now. I'm different. l'm just ignorant. I don't know what is the matter with business. So it goes. Neglected, ignored, waved airily aside were all my chances to be a good, sound, knowledgeable Toronto citizen. owning my own home twith an 80 per cent mortgage on itj a good party man, voting the right way all the way-why, my goodness! I never vote the same way twice, and lately I haven't voted at all. And as for the mortgage on my house, I don't even own a house. The man who owns my house was good at trigonometry. CAnd rents are doWn.J E181 ,T H E -IL Q55 No, ma'am. if I had it to do over again, I would certainly strive to be a number one boy, a good athlete and a first-class debater. You believe me, I am sure. For what did my high school, dear old Harbord give me? Just some rags and tatters of the things I loved and love stillg the rooms of my spirit are draped with bits ripped from Wordsworth lmy English master had never heard of The Prelude-it wasn't in the authorized school editionli glorious banners from Tennyson, sweet archaic bowls, mugs, platters from Shakespeare set along the mantel shelf of my heart: the carpet is a rag rug, a sort of hooked rug from old Quebec, with bits of Parkman, with authentic snatches of Mac- kenziana, and through it goes a pattern of thin, faded stuff that seems to be of Latin and Greek material .... I don't know: it might be nice to have a room for your spirit all checkered up with nice modernistic geometric patterns, with bright. keen paint on the walls, and trophies of sport set around. But I like the room Harbord helped me furnish. My heart is very happy there. NIGHT LIFE Anne Marjorie Beer 66 AN you night-edit to-night with me? said the Women's Editor one day as I, a green reporter on the College daily, went into the office to receive the day's assignment of work. Yes! I gulped in eagerness, and immediately after was torn between fear and yearning. Night-editing! The phrase conjured up no picture, but casual remarks of other night-editors haunted me for the rest of the day. My family received the news with a misgiving mingled with pride-never before had a member of our tribe stayed up all night to edit a newspaper! I scoffed at the misgiving and basked in the pride, and set out for the night office about eight o'clock. Any feeling of self-importance vanished when I arrived there. The monotonous sound of printing presses at work, the peculiar, haunting smell of printer's ink plunged me immediately into a new and strange world. Here and there were reporters and editors, trying to talk above the noise. pounding on typewriters, writing feverishly. Instantly impressed with the feeling that the task at hand was all- important, I hurried into the inner office where the Women's Editor was already deep in work. She greeted me cheerily, gave me a few words of general advice, thrust a pile of papers into my hand, and bade me proof-read. Inspired by the spirit of urgency that seemed everywhere I grabbed a pencil and commenced. How grateful I was for the proof-reading I had done in the good old days on THE MUSE! Ilfll -THE MUSE The written material, or copy, was brought in, intermittently, throughout the evening. There were accounts of meetings represent- ing many branches of university life. interviews with students or pro- fessors on local topics. write-ups of many games, announcements, feature-articles. All these had been assigned inthe editorial offices that day by the Mens and Womens News Editors. Each reporter, having written O.Ii. by his tor herl assignment, was responsible for having his copy in the night-office as early as possible. For a long. long time I sat there. reading and rewriting material. It was then given to the linotype man who set the copy in type. His reddened eyes and exprcssionless face aroused my sympathy as I watched him sit before his machine. his lingers moving like auto- matons, hour after hour. The type was set in narrow rows, and, hav- ing been covered by a thin strip of paper, was subjected by us to a heavy roller which had been well painted with printer's ink-and presto. there were printed words on paper. I learned that this Was a galley sheet. We took all such sheets back to the inner otiice for further proof-reading. By this time the smell of printer's ink seemed as natural as breathing, the noise and hurry of the otiice a part of life. But the night was just beginning! Now the Womens Editor spread a copy of an old issue before her and called me over to watch her make up a dummy copy. Prints of the advertisements were pinned on the old issue, and into the space that remained all the material on the galley sheets had to be arranged. Never before had I studied a newspaper for the form of its make-up. Now I judged each article for its length and its relation to front page importance. Thus: was the third meeting of the Seven Occult Socratics of more interest to student readers than the interview with Professor Dry-as-Dust on the influence of residence alarm clocks? Was the account of the student who had been pushed into the swimming pool at a dance as important as the advance-note of a play written by a local freshman '3 Should the rugby hero's picture go here, or there? Keeping in mind the relative importance of the material the Women's Editor worked swiftly and carefully, rejecting this, placing that. I marvelled at the quickness of her decisions as her blue pencil went up and down the pages. allocating space until the skeleton was complete. Ever since that Iirst lesson in formation I have looked on the pages of any newspaper with a reverent eye. Unconsciously now I appraise a front page for its balanced arrangement, or lack of it. It was well into the morning hours before we were under way with our next big task. that of writing head-lines. First, though, should their form be packed or sloping? QI had never thought of it beforell I learned that those with three lines had a different name from those with two. that each had a certain number of drop lines in varying sizes of type. I learned that others were specially set by hand by Dick. the typesetter. The making of them was much more exacting than solving cross-word puzzles ever was. Each line could contain only a certain number of lettersg frequently I would be stung by the splendour of a sudden thought for a good line only to discover that it had far too many letters. For instance, l20l THE MUSE NSTARTLING DISCOVERY BY CO-ED attracts the eye but is too long in the first line, and too short in the second, A beginner must plot many times to get even such a solution as CO-ED'S DISCOVERY STARTLES CAMPUS The hours crept into three and four as my now benumbed brain worked steadily upon the elusive lines. I read over every article so often to get information for sparkling captions that their phrases were with me for weeks afterwards. My body was stiff and my eyes heavy as I watched the Womens Editor and Dick set up the paper in type. Dawn was beginning to break outside the window, but I was scarcely conscious of it. On a wide table was laid a metal form the size of the newspaper's four pages. Guided by the dummy copy the Women's Editor showed Dick where she wanted each article. He with his practised eye and a quick hand would go to the long rows of type, pick out the desired article and its headlines and set it in place in the form. Bit by bit the paper took shape under our eyes, the old dummy copy assuming definite form. Occasionally an article would be too long to fit in and we would frantically re-read the original copy for possible lines to cut. Finally. the paper was complete. and one copy was made for a final test as to its accuracy. I smiled wanly as my superior ofiicer declared, And now we can go home. Not till then did I raise my head to discover that night had gone and morning come. With a jerk I realized that for the last ten hours the night-editing world had been all-absorbing, all-sufiicient. Nothing had mattered but the production of that one issue. For that space of time it ranked in importance with the greatest dailies of the land, its editors had been kings to command me. its production as vital as if the whole world was awaiting our morning news. I night-edited many times after that, but no issue was as memor- able to me as that first oneg no feeling of achievement and of well- earned rest as keen as the feeling within me that morning when, the press building doors closing behind us, we stepped out into the fresh cool air to make our way up past the grey, silent university towards a strong cup of coffee and a long sleep. E211 ,gc mc - s.iH.E:lfUc5E..-. heels..-U DANGER AHEAD Hascl Hummonrl T some time in the more thoughtful interlude of a live-year so- journ. a large percentage of high school students turn their vagrant thoughts to the immediate hereafter, and begin to thumb the calendar of the University of Toronto. So misleading is that hieroglyphic publication to the uninitiated, and so sparse is the advice obtainable on any of the more important considerations of Uni- versity life-such as whoopee, freshman behaviour, and the essential evasions-that I submit a few observations based on a personal exper- ience full of error. The first inevitable question is-which college ?-and the answer varies with the individual. If you have a dominant ego and prefer to do what you like when you like and how, go to University College. I did: it was one of my few inspired decisions. There are so many people at U.C. that during the first term a friendless freshman has a haunting suspicion that he could die quietly in an alcove and that a week later the janitor would sweep up the corpse. That is the nice part about it, if you like that sort of thing: you can do more things without being noticed than in any other part of the University. You can make friends or remain a recluse, pant after activities or stag- nate with indolence, be evangelical or communistic, just as you wish. If you have an urge to become a humiliated freshman, the opportunity is yours: if you don't like red ties and respect your own dignity, remain quiet and no one will know the diiference. Even attendance at lectures is largely optionalg if you prefer the mid-night oil to the cold light of a nine o'c1ock lecture. few there are who will object. All is different at Victoria. There an informal, friendly atmos- phere will breeze out towards you and you will be quickly led into College Life in the Victorian style. If a stranger to the city wanted to become acquainted with Toronto in half an hour, he could see it all at Victoria College, its most typical production. Prudence. piety and patriotism manifest themselves in a ceaseless flow of wholesome activ- ity. Best of all, O ye timid ones, you can go from high school to Victoria and hardly notice the difference! As for Trinity, the distinctions are different. You need to be born to Trinity. and if there is any doubt about your title, it is danger- ous to take chances. The Trinity man or woman Wears a tattered gown with nonchalance all about the campus, acquires an Oxford accent, and studies Religious Knowledge. Trinity is a law unto itself and remains. for the most part, sublimely aloof from the rest of the University, and if you are born to it, it is the right and only place for vou. - The choice of St. Michael's depends almost entirely on religious creed, although those of the Catholic faith can choose between it and University College. College spirit is rampant, and the loyal under- grad of St. Mike's finds life just a continuous whirl of excitement. livery hour he can spare from his studies, and even more, is spent in cheering on the basketball team, boosting the French society, address- ing the chairman and otherwise making life real and earnest. ifil THE MUSE The college chosen, comes the diliiculty of the course. Most people either abandon thought and say brightly: I used to add awfully well -I think I'll go into Maths, twhereupon their names are among the missing in Julie lists! or in the awful chaos of the calendar they feverishly grasp the first likely thing at hand twhereupon anything may happenl. There is no infallible method of procedure, but it is advisable to consult first several of the faculty about the curriculum. and then graduates and students about the faculty. Only the professor lcnows his course, and only the student knows his professor! A few practical details. and then the sophisticated Malvernite may happily cross U. of T. portals. Don't imagine this institution to be either Rah-Rah American or academic English: it is a cross be- tween the two. and in it the twain have met. Don't eat at the cafe- teria if you like good food and prefer to end your meals in a mood of joy and peace. And don't, however strong the temptation, cross the campus on a muddy morning! These things are major errors. On the other hand-avoid mass meetings like the plague, unless you are already addicted to activity for its own sake. Break minor regulations with sangfroid. And if you would be happy though free. remember that the University academic year lasts only seven months. and has a way of ending abruptly while you are unprepared! FAREWELI. T0 ARMS Teddy Recre RULE has been passed to the effect that the football teams of the Toronto collegiates are not to be handled by outside coaches. This is probably only a minor detail to almost every- one else. but it is a very sad blow to one Edward H. Reeve. After eight years with the Malvern boys I had somehow come to think that I was not an outside coach at all. Mingling through those stirring seasons with husky, headlong youngsters answering to strange names like Yip and Ham and Albie and Quarts and Nurts: watching them pound through practice after practice till they reached precision: getting the jitters with them in the dressing room before the big gamesg mourning or cheering with them after the tide of vic- tory went with us or turned into backwash, has been a proud privilege that has brightened up every year for me since I first strolled up to the old gravel school yard in 1924. The great spirit that exists between the boys and the masters of Malvern and the interest and enthusiasm shown towards the foot- ball fortunes by the parents of the pupils has all combined to make this outside coach feel. or at least hope, that he was part of the institution. Well, all good things must end but this good thing did not end until I enjoyed eight wonderful autumns for which I am truly grateful. And from those days there are many matters that I will always remember. I23l THE MUSE For instance, each year there were far more boys out for the teams than could be carried. Some two-thirds of these eager-eyed battlers would have to be disappointed owing to their lack of size or speed or lack of judgment on the part of the coach land that often happenedi. But each year we noticed that these lads. who had failed to win themselves a place along the line of battle, were still the staunchest supporters of the Malvern teams and the stoutest rooters for the boys who had been fortunate enough to land the uniforms which they had tried so hard to win. On every team there would be a few fellows who only worked into the games for tive minutes here. a few moments there or perhaps a short quarter the following week when one of the regulars was being repaired. Yet these substitutes would be the first out to practice and the last to the shower baths. They were all for the team and often, it turned out. they developed into our finest players. Most positions. especially on the line. had two players to fill them about equally well and it always seemed to me that the snap-back or the inside wing who was on the bench was always the first to stand up and give a hearty Yea when the team mate in his position made a nice tackle or a good plunge. Those sort of things. which were perhaps noticeable to no one else. always made me think that there was more to football than the scoring of points. Associating with such boys would be an inspiration for any man. Their coach is free to admit that he has been helped more than once by the thought The Malvern kids wouldn't think much of me if I did that. Maybe, once or twice. it has worked both ways. I hope so. BY AEROPLANE ACROSS THE ENGLISH CHANNEL C. W. HOI'ffIll HE Imperial Airways operates a regular system of fiights and and publishes a time-table somewhat resembling those of the railways. The traveller must appear at its London ofiice. adjacent to Victoria Station. where he as well as his baggage is weighed. He is conveyed to Croydon aerodrome by bus and there is quickly ushered into the cabin of the waiting aeroplane. The first to enter drop into the nearest seats and I. the last to enter, was obliged to walk up the narrow aisle to the front where I secured a seat on the left, which unexpectedly proved to be the choicest in the cabin. The rumbling of the propellers rose rapidly to a roar: a short run and we left the ground entering at once on that curious sensation of being borne up on elastic supports as we soared onward. The lovely Surrey fields stretched out below. irregular in shape separated by dark green hedges. winding lanes and highways. Soon the vari- colourefl patchwork of Kentish fields succeeded and rapidly passed beneath us. Presently I discovered that it was possible to write with ease and comfort, and this is the letter I wrote home:- l24l 'THE MUSE' - In flight on Imperial Airways. Air Liner Fity of flozfcntry. Over Tonbridge Q25 miles from Croydenl August 18, 1931. I am writing this at an elevation of 2,000 feet and a speed of 85 miles. The day is sunny: the air clear: the land below an ir- regular patchwork of greens and yellows, dotted with buildings. A stream winds along, as do the lanes and highways between dark green hedges. The sun on our right lights up the objects below, and seated on the left, forward, I have an unobstructed view and watch the shadow of the plane as it races across the fields. Now at 5.35 we are off Dungeness, 60 miles from Croyden. Over the Straits of Dover the view is humdrum: blue sea below. mottled sky above and around. A propeller whirls at my left, another at my right: rather noisy they are. To get this writing paper I walked back to the steward at the rear: the stingy beggar gave me only one sheet. Above in front sit the pilots: through a small pane of glass I can see one as well as the steward who has just taken up to them what looks like refreshment. One of these pilots promised us we should see the German Zeppelin now on its way to London, which is all agog to-day over the expected visit. Look! I can see the French shore 65543. Tiny clouds spot the prospect. A town appears with its river. Boats below look like float- ing midges. A village shows a fan-shaped arrangement of streets. Here the steward brought me a bottle of Canada Dry Ginger Ale f9d.l in which I pledged the country which gives it its name. fI have begged another sheet from the steward who this time has given me two. I retract the word stingyl. In places the French fields below are more freakish in shape than the Sussex farms, so very odd at times. Villages appear, loiter alongside, and drop behind. Many fields are covered with water-a rainy season. Yonder lies a great wooded expanse, what forest I wonder. There a toy train creeps lazily along. For a time we kept the channel on our right but now I cannot see it. Here comes a considerable town in a pleasant valley with a long wind- ing stream, while near by a train tries in vain to race with us. Flooded in sunshine, the land to my left smiles with its myriad tiny fields. This town presents a tangled cluster, like a child's blocks in partial disarray. It is succeeded by a great plain with vari-coloured parquetry. The tall slender trees are casting elongated shadows. A score or so of houses nestle inside a green patch of wood around which spread fields of farm land. Directly below us motor cars creep along a narrow avenue of trees. I look abroad: my glass reveals a great distance to a somewhat hazy horizon. Now rain clouds envelop us but beyond shines the sun, though in a mottled sky. There lies Beauvais, succeeded by an agricultural section where farmers are ploughing with horses tandem. The scene displays the various colours of grain fields. meadow and fallow-land. interspersed with wooded patches and lines of trees. very lovely when i251 kgwggggi THE MUSE sudden bright sunlight brightens one side of the trees and casts long dark shadows across the open spaces. Now I count ten villages all in view at one time. pleasant looking places all. That train is dwarfed by the great shadows which it casts. The shadow ot' its smoke wins in a race with those of a long line of Lombardy poplars to reach that winding river. A glance to the west out of our right window reveals haze and dimness but the sunlit View to my left is glorious. As I strain my sight in the endeavour to learn if any cattle other than Holstein. inhabit these iields, the aeroplane lurches but not violently. Is it a gusty wind? But this looks like Le Burget. The propeller slows. The noise decreases. We are descending. Now we are over the town: it comes up to meet us. A burst of speed! Here we are on earth once more. The taxi-ing is rough. This scrawl will be illegible. We cross the circle. rise and fall like a boat at sea. approach the hangars andl VAGABOND .lust a ragged. tattered suit that barely hangs together. But ripening summer fields are lying golden in the sun. And for my bed a hill-top with a soft green carpet The first star for my taper when the pleasant day is done. Not a half-a-dozen coins to jingle in my pockets, But yet as compensation there are moments of delight: That mystic wonder-moment when the dim, blue twilight Is softly overshadowed by the indigo of night. Few are my possessions, but the world is full of beauty: A white beach and the breaking waves with foam-tipped curls, And dawns that come as preludes to the hours of daylight. And tields of flowers that nod and sway like rows of dancing girls. Idle smoke in thin blue wisps from fires I have kindled And little friendly paths that twist and lead you know not where, And owls at night and bats that swoop black-winged in velvet And teasing winds that run their gentle fingers through your hair. I am rich, the earth has set her store of gifts before me. A symphony of beauty. and a pageant of surprise. I choose to be a Vagabond, to tramp foreverg My heart and soul are free, the open road before me lies. -HELEN ORAM. E261 THE MUSE MISS DAFOE ISS HELEN DAFOE. former head of the De- partment of History at lllalvern Collegiate Institute. re- signed her position on the staff last summer, on her return from a year's leave of absence spent in travel abroad. to marry Mr. William Martin, and to take up residence in Palma. in the Span- ish island of Mallorca. She has been sorely missed. both by her friends on the staff and by all pupils who had had - the privilege of being taught by her. Of the excellence of her W 3 work in the school it seems al- f' W I most unnecessary to speak: it 2 speaks and will continue to -3 speak for itself in the achieve- ment and in the broadened know- ledge of those who were her pupils, in their intelligent inter- est, fostered by her. in world affairs, and in that most important subject of study. the history of the life of men on earth. What- ever she did, whether teaching or advising the Girls' Club or the Literary Society, she did with all her heart, and as well as it could be done. The part she played in the development and encouragement of the fine school spirit synonymous with the name Malvern . is difficult to estimate fully. She was a teacher who is not easily re- placed. Wherever she came there was life. ROSES Sometimes I think That a white rose Is the pure thought of a young girl And a pink rose Is a baby's gurgling laugh. But a red rose-passionate, glowing Is the love of all lovers everywhere Since time began. -HELEN ORAM. i271 .wx THE MUSE i281 A I if. , 'J 1 O C .3 J.. - ' ' .hfiznni THEg-MgUSQ gg -H in-T OUR MONUMENT HE Great War of 1914-1918 is little more than a name to nearly all the present pupils of Malvern. The oldest of them were in infancy at that time and can know little or nothing of the stress and strain of those years. They are probably only vaguely aware of the bearing of that tremendous conflict upon our present economic condition. However that may be. it is fitting that those now in attend- ance should have their attention called to a constant reminder of the sad toll exacted by that awful war. Though the school then was small and not long established, yet a goodly number of students and graduates responded to the call to arms as you may gather from the Roll of Honour hanging in the main corridor north. The monument in front of the school was erected in memory of those youths who died in the dreadful carnage of that deadly war. On it you may read the names of twenty-three who proved their loyalty by yielding up their lives. For them hearts still bleed and homes mourn a vacant chair. Their heroism laid a duty upon this school and community to prepare a fitting memorial. After careful planning and considerable effort by those on whom fell the melancholy privilege, this monument was erected in May, 1922, and unveiled by our present premier, Hon. G. S. Henry. Your attention is requested to the nature of the tribute: to its symbolism in the rock basis on which stands the virile youth. in the raised head, the crusader's sword, the broken chain: to its reverent spirit without pride or boasting. Be sure to read and treasure in memory the noble inscriptions. And when the day comes for us to pay our respect to the memory of those heroic youths, may we gather about the monument with hearts touched with gratitude and softened into humility. -C. W. H. l21'l Q-di-.gg M T Hggill li S Big g H fgggg OUR BUST OF MR. LEHMANN T IS surprising for a High School to be so fortunate as to possess a bust of its Principal, but as the result of talent of an ex-pupil, Cleeve Horne, Malvern is an exception. It is not the first time that C'leeve's skill has been displayed at Malverng his works are ever becoming more widely known and admired. When in 1929 an article featuring his work appeared in The Muse, the attention of the Literary Society was called to his remark- able talent and the executive became interested. Accordingly, Cleeve was asked to model a bust of Mr. Lehmann, which task he accom- plished last year. The bust was formally presented to the school at Commencement last November and has now been placed in the library. The Literary Society is to be congratulated upon its prompt action in seizing such an opportunity while Cleeve was still at Malvern. Fleeve gained his honour matriculation in four years at Malvern and is now, a year later, in the second year at the College of Art. The comment which his work has already aroused convinces us that his future as a sculptor is assured. The wish of every Malvernite is for his continued success. The bust isnot only a fitting testimony to the artist's ability, but also the esteem in which Malvern holds Mr. Lehmann. H301 THE MUSE I C E A Short Short Story by ll'iIIianz A. Connor HE cold sun glittered on rolling hills of ice covered snow. Un- broken stretches of ice Hed into the dazzling horizon. A cutting wind whirled flakes of snow in eddies and save for its low whistle there was not a sound. When the wind lulled, the silence was heavy and oppressive: it seemed as though a great storm was coming rapidly. Now and then the ice cracked with a staccato report. Far over the ice two little dark smudges broke the endless sheet of white. They shifted. stood still for a moment, then moved slowly closer. In a short while the larger of the two grew into a man, and the smaller into a dog. The man was swathed heavily in furs and his ungainly figure moved erratically. He swayed and stumbled and occasionally his feet became so unmanageable that he was forced to stop. His face mirrored his bewilderment at such moments, and finally he would stagger on again. The dog trotted with dropping tail behind him. The man's face was covered with a heavy black beard, covered in turn with many fine icicles. Fine white particles made his black eyebrows seem silver, and a rifle trailed from his mittened hand. Steven Harvey was a trapper. For days the had long since lost count of timel. he and a companion had wandered aimlessly over the glaring ice. hopelessly lost. Caught in a blizzard. they had been driven far from their snug cabin. Steve's companion. wearied by the endless iight with starvation and cold, had finally ad- mitted defeat. He was dead. far back on the trail. Before his death he had pleaded with Steve to spare the dog. The dog was food, and the two men were starving. His companion had died to save the life of a dog. The dog belonged to Steve, but his companion had become greatly attached to it during the long winter months. It was a true dog of the north, gaunt and rangy beneath its thick gray hair. Its stamina had triumphed over that of the man. While the man tottered the dog was firm upon his feet: the man's mind was befuddled and foggy. while that of the dog was clear. The dog should have led the two, not the man. Nevertheless the dominance of man throughout the centuries kept the dog behind. Steve reeled drunkenly now and he began to mumble. The ice cracked beneath him. for Steve was a big man and the ice was thin. The dog looked questioningly up and Steve passed a huge furred hand over his face. Far over on the horizon a blue finger of smoke trickled up into the frozen blue sky. The dog p1'icked up his ears and his nose began to twitch: Steve stumbled blindly on. The dog whimpered softly but Steve took no notice. It whimpered again. and the man turned angrily and cursed it in a high cracked voice. Steve's brain whirled and a wave of hot unreasoning fury broke over him. He raised his gun to his shoulder and levelled its slim barrel at the dog. The dog. sensing something amiss. weaved quietly from side to side. The man was unable to keep the rifle barrel still and he cursed again. A deafening report and the dog rolled head over heels at the shock of the heavy calibre bullet. The man smiled a crooked grin of anticipation as he advanced toward l31l THE MUSE the fallen animal. It lay stretched full length. and suddenly as he reeled toward it a sickening wave of nausea swept over him and he crashed face foremost into the snow. The dog struggled upright, and a red bullet furrow showed across its skull. Its tongue lolled over its gleaming teeth as it crawled painfully to its master and would-be murderer. It licked his face-once. Two days later Steven Harvey awoke in a cabin filled with bluish pine smoke. His body was pleasantly warm beneath a huge pile of blankets and his eyes wandered over a rough hewn log roof. They strayed down a wall and stopped lazily as they encountered the ruddy glow of a iire across the room. Logs crackled pleasantly in a crude stone grate. and the abundance of heat made his face tingle a little. His eyes wandered to a man seated by the fire looking at him with flashing dark eyes. Smoke curled from a black pipe between his lips. To the silent question in the sick man's eyes the other answered: Your dog, M'sieu, he come to my door. He lead me to you. Where, said Steve, is the dog? He die, M'sieu, from cut on head, said the Frenchman. THE CLOCKS AT MALVERN NE of the latest deveiopments of the clock industry is the per- fecting of the electric clock, Iirst invented by Alexander Bain in 1843. In one type electricity is used to wind the clock, but in another electrical vibrations cause the movement of the pendulum. The clock's errors may, they say, be corrected by a system of syn- chronization, by which a number of clocks are connected electrically to a master clock. Yet, despite all this scientific application and control of delicate mechanism, at Malvern disorder is rife. The master in the school ofiice seems to have no control whatsoever over his subjects in the various forms. They are running wild! On making a circuit of the rooms one would perceive that. in some, dawn should soon be in evidence, whereas ln others the shades of evening are stretching themselves out tor the night. During lunch period a few days ago I expounded to several of my chums the futility of scientific attempts to better the sun dial and the hour-glass. I was just beginning to pride myself on having aroused in them a realization of the absurdity of our supposed time-keeping system. when one of them declared himself a staunch defender of our electric clocks. Then he proceeded to credit the clocks with such marvelous accuracy that my convictions began to topple and I came to believe that the system is really very ingenious. First, he reminded us of that old question: If it is twelve o'clock noon at Greenwich, what time is it at-1'3 Then by playing on our school spirit he incited us to the grandness of our realm and of all that transpires in our own little world, Malvern. V121 THE MUSE gzg g g The reason why you find a variation in the time throughout the school is, he disclosed, because of the extreme accuracy of the clocks. When it is twelve o'clock noon by the clock above the auditorium entrance in the main hall, the time east and west of that central posi- tion varies in direct proportion as the distance thence. Therefore, it is considerably earlier in the western extremity of our great domain than it is at the eastern boundf' But, I remonstrated. still not convinced, that is no reason why the clocks on the third fioor are so much in advance of those on the first floor during the morning and then lag behind so grievously in the afternoon. Yes! I was just coming to that, he contided in a superior air. Not only do our clocks allow for longitude, but they are also very sensitive to altitude. It is a well-known fact that the greater the alti- tude at which one is, the farther distant appears the horizon. Thus. the higher one is the sooner does the sun rise and so he is in advance of those persons on a lower level. But, in a similar manner does the sun set later for him than for the ones on the ground, and conse- quently he becomes behind time. What could be more precise than such a timing system as this: a system of clocks that even allows for longitude and altitude: the clocks at Malvern. Could he be correct? Had we such a marvelous system of clocks? After my vigorous denunciation of the clocks, I was loath to believe so, and yet. so it certainly seemed. That afternoon, while attempting to solve a geometrical conun- drum, I perceived that the clock had stopped. For the next week I made special observations of the clocks and came to realize that some- times they ran but often they did not. Could the system's champion explain that satisfactorily? I could think of no plausible excuse for such behaviour, unless it be owing to the fact that the horned moon has become caught upon the peak of the new Hagpole at the Canadian National Exhibition. But on further consideration I realized that not even this atrocious detention of a planet would explain their stopping, for the orbit of the moon has been deviated, not that of the sun. With rising hopes I conducted still further investigations which revealed the fact that as many of the clocks in the west wing were fast as were slow, and inversely in the eastern section. My spirits were fully revived. The champion's defences were proven invalid: and now I could renew my condemnation with added zest. Why. the clocks at Malvern are so uncertain that if Mr. Breslove were to find that the periods Hee all too quickly, let him point to the time-piece and his class will consequently be transported so far behind time as to make Ancient History their current events, or as to give him plenty of addi- tional time in which to point out the beauty of Caesar's tongue. When Miss Mc-Alpine becomes disgusted and scolds you in that way she has, so that you wish the moment would never pass, then flee to W34, where Mr. Day's eloquence of speech and gesture holds the clocks spellbound for hours. E331 i gg THE MUSE On the other hand. the clock in W31 leaps ahead at such a rate that Miss Muirhead is virtually robbed of that leisure in which to read The Globe. so enjoyed during her student years at Malvern. Therefore. I implore of you to help vanquish the unjust master who rules with the iron hand and, after the manner of the English House of Commons. to revert to the old reliable-the hour-glass. -W. H. BENNETT, 4B. BAB'S FRIEND HE Sznythes were in dire straits. Once they had lived in luxury. but suddenly disaster had sprung upon them. Mr. Smythe las he then termed himselfj had been completely prostrated bythe sudden bankruptcy of the company in which he held the majority of shares. :ind was unable to save even a little of his fortune out of the chaos. Earle Smythe. the eldest son. returning from college badly in debt as usual. found the family plunged in deep gloom and poverty. To :nake matters worse. his mother persisted in carrying out the extrava- gant receptions for her debutante daughter, Marie. Babs. a pretty, joyous little creature of sixteen. seemed the only one in the house- hold capable of facing and coping with the difficulty. ' With many a moan and grumble the Smythes departed from their fine house and surroundings and settled in a small suburban district under the more staid name of Smith. Day in and day out. Mrs. Smith seltishly bewailed the loss of her servants. receptions, gossip. et cetera, without the slightest thought for her sick husband. One day Earle. returning home and after an angry outburst in which he declared that he was sick of hunting jobs all day and listening to his motl1er's grumbles at home, packed his grip and left the house. Nothing more was heard of him until several months later. A rumour was heard of his marriage to some second-rate actress. Marie, regard- less of circumstances, tried to continue her usual routine of luncheons, afternoon teas, dinners and dances. Only Babs began looking for a position in earnest. After a week of tramping along endless roads and avenues to answer advertisements, she was engaged as com- panion-governess to a rich little girl of ten. Her qualifications-good education. speech and manners and a neat, fashionable appearance- won her this position immediately. Babs, having adopted the more demure name of Barbara, began her duties the next day and found them exceedingly tiresome. She now had to bear the same kind of treatment as her mother had so recently dealt out to their servants. Her charge-Helena Cox- Richardson-was a spoilt, exacting child and demanded every bit of l2arbara's attention and services, so that at the end of her long hours Barbara was thoroughly tired out and dispirited. But when she became better acquainted with her employers there was one thing that made her days happy and carried her through her tasks by the l34l THE MUSE anticipation of it. Uncle Paul, a crippled old man, disregarded and spoken of as slightly off his head by the rest of the household. also found an interest which made his lonely, painful days brighter. Extremely rich since his youth, he had devoted the prime of his life to purchasing rare editions of old books and ancient and mottled manuscripts. Engaged in this one pursuit, he had never cared for or sought the priceless thing which every person needs at some time of his life-true friendship. He had bitterly regretted this fact ever since twelve years ago, when a whole wall of shelves loaded with heavy volumes had collapsed upon him. leaving him with a partially paralysed side and frequent agonizing pains. From then on he spent the greater part of the time in his own private library, cut off from the rest of the house. Now, at last, he found in Barbara a spirit that humoured his whims, followed patiently his disjointed explanations about different books, or eagerly listened to the story of his adventures in gaining some dearly-prized volume as he held it tenderly in his trembling lingers. Evening after evening Barbara visited the solitary old man as soon as her duties were completed, and together they would discuss some book he had lent her to read, or laugh over amusing little inci- dents of that day. Evening after evening the weak voice would repeat, I can never thank you enough for all that you have done for me: one day perhaps I will repay you-who can tell? But Barbara would sadly look at his worn, patient face and the doctor's words would echo in her ears. Weaker and weaker, Miss Barbara: make him happy while you can. He has had a lonely life, with books as his only friends. Alas, there would be no chance for repayment, but his gratitude was ample reward for all she could do. At last one evening Barbara had remained only a few minutes with her friend. I am very tired to-night, child, he had said with a sigh, and when she left kissed her for the first time. All the next day Barbara's heart was heavy. as she repeated sadly over and over to herself. the short sentence Hung at her that morning: He was found dead this morning. He was found dead this morning. This unsympathetic statement had been made by one of the busy secretaries engaged to see to all the elaborate arrange- ments for the funeral. Returning with her little pupil from the trying funeral. through- out which Mrs. Cox-Richardson had uttered stifled sobs, while Helena had wriggled here and there, Barbara was told by the butler that the mistress wished her to go to the sitting-room in half an hour. During the intervening time Barbara's mind was full of busy thoughts and questions-what could she be wanted for this afternoon? Surely not to aid at any reception, for it had been announced that Mrs. Cox- Richardson would not be at home for a week. Had she done any- thing wrong, was she to be dismissed, or was it some reprimand for a little task she had overlooked? f35l TFL. M Uii so cc As she descended the stairs, Barbara heard a subdued hum of voices from the drawing room and wondered who could have called after all: then. opening the door, she entered the room and found it full of fashionably-dressed men and women. On seeing her enter, Mrs. Cox-Richardson rose and remarked to the man seated beside her. Here is Miss Smith at last: I believe we can begin now? With everyone staring at her, Barbara slipped into the nearest chair as the man spoken to rose, gathering up several documents. Instantly. with a shufiiing of feet and a clearing of throats, all attention turned in his direction and he began to read. Only then did it dawn on Barbara that this was the reading of Uncle Paul's will. But still she saw no reason for her presence, and was wondering Whether she was needed as a witness perhaps-she had never . . . and to Barabara Smith the sum of sixty thousand dollars and any of my books that she may wish to have. The precise voice broke into her thoughts with this amazing statement. Barbara glanced up startled. Had she rmlly heard that? It must be right, for everybody was again staring at her. and a sudden buzz of conversation swung over their heads. Through the monotonous reading of the rest of the will. Barbara was filled with gratitude for her friend. With dim eyes, throbbing throat and clenched fists. she recalled the sound of that patient voice saying. Some day I will repay you. He had really done it, and now she would be able to get Dad well again and give Mother a little more enjoyment. -M. PRICE. SHE TASTED PRAISE They gave the golden goblet of success, O'er brimming with the rich Wine of applause: She drank it all, and, filled with happiness, She rose among the stars-and knew the cause. All night she walked the clouds-the Milky Way Was made a scarf for her young shoulders proudg She let the stars by handfuls, as in play, Drip through her fingers-and she laughed aloud. And when, at dawn. on high Olympus' height, She watched the rose-mauve gauzes drift apart. The morning star, of purest silver bright, Came near, and left its light within her heart. -RUTH SHEPARD. I :su 1 THE JIFSE ilu illllemnriam FR XN lx RIC H -XRDQ O11 JHIILIHIX 31st Nlalx 6111 lobt A 11101111 1espectecl student 111 the de'1th ot Flalllx R1Cl111flN 417 Bom 111 Sf1sl1atcl1exs111 on D6C6HllJ91 9nd 1914 l1e spent moxt ot hle eulx box hood 111 11 este1 I1 Ca111d1 1111911 l11N 1111e11tQ tust Came to To1onto l1e attended Bloo1 QOll90'1 ate md 1t new not t1ll lNox 61111391 1930 that he e11te1ed 111119111 Slnce that tlme 1ll health p1exe11tecl hw taltlng 1111 dctlxe PH1l1I1SCl'100l'1C'l1X1l1GS but l11S qulet LOLllll99X and hu C0111 age 111 endu1111g lllness xx on the lespect ot all 11 ho knew 111111 Hu death IS deeplx 16g'IQltQCl In llls clam mateQ the Muqe 101115 xx 1lfl1 them 111 DPIXIIIQ' t11l1ute to hu 1116111011 e 1671011518 Cl 1111111111 of 1111111111 11111111 111111 drrpuz' 11111pa1'I11m1'o 'll Hmtofz 111 1l1611ss 1 1115 112 I v- , . 1 1 v Y , I ' I A 4 L v v ' , , v- . w 1 . v 1 . P 1 1 - a . ' ' . r I , . v 1 -s l f r , v, K , C ne, -1 C . H ' . LY x 1 2 .tv K. . . ' v .v I i . ' ' I C. 1 AC L . 1 '. . ' v. ' T v - O c , c - . 0 . - 1 - . v , L Q . - . . K , , . , v . C , ' S , . xxx S , . ' 1' ' ww v v w 1 Y v w v . l-w ee L . e . v u 1 - .w 'N 1 f ' ' i ,K L -e- L, . T11 W 23 '. 1 1 1 S. ' J-. A . 1'. , 1 F-I' if ' , 1271 THE MUSE SCHOLASTIC ACHIEVEMENTS HE barrage laid down by the Department of Education last June left a heavy casualty list. But rising out of this confusion were those who stood up well under Iire. Two especially brought great honour to Malvern by winning scholarships: Reginald Watters-Joseph Henderson Memorial Scholarshipg James Harris Scholarship lEnglish and Historyj. Margaret Wilson-Hamilton Fisk Biggar Proficiency Scholar- ship in Languages. The other outstanding students were: FIFTH FORM HONOUR MATRICULATION First First No, of Class No. of Class Papers Honours Papers Honour, Reginald Watters .... 11 11 James Davy ............. 10 6 Margaret Wilson ..... 11 9 Solomon Schniffer... 11 5 Harold Bernstein .... 11 6 Phyllis Kimber ........ 11 4 FOURTH FORM PASS MATRICULATION First First No. of Class No. of Class Papers Honours Papers Honours Madge Price ............. 12 12 Solomon Shankman 13 10 George Watson ........ 14 12 Ruth Shepard .......... 12 10 Grace Barber ........... 14 11 Phyllis Harvey ........ 11 9 Dorothy Bell ............ 14 11 Norman Robinson... 12 9 Iris Benneworth ...... 14 11 Alan Weatherburn.. 12 9 Gladys Neale ............ 12 10 Allen Crocker .......... 12 8 Irene Prior ............... 12 .10 Margaret More ........ 12 8 THIRD FORM PASS MATRICULATION The following received a possible of 3 First Glass Honours: William Balcomb, Harold Garfield, Harry Gillis, Leslie Gray, Stanley Hutchings, Marjorie Linn, Edith Martin, Dolly Phillips, Louis Pritzker, Norman Stephenson. THE ORATORICAL CONTEST The oratorical contest this year was well contested but poorly attended. The poor attendance discouraged the speakers to a great extent, and as a result they did not do their best. Russia proved to be the favourite subject of the speakers, as no lt-ss than three boys spoke on Russia. The girls' contest was as good as the lioys but the speakers seemed again greatly disappointed by their audience. The results were as follows: mai T H E JI I' S E GIRLS Loiiaiue l.usli-Kev. G. A. Williams Gold Medal. Hazel CrOClXVlll-lllillY9l'll Home amd School Club Silver Medal. Nellie Beattie-Malx'e1'11 Home amd School Flulm Bronze Medal. BOYS Bruce McCo1'kell-'Packlei' 'l'1'opliy: Rev. G. A. Williams Silvei Medal. Jack LlglllfOOt-BlZllY6l'll Home amd School Club Silver Medal. Jolm Dickson-MalVe1'1i Home :md Sehool Flulm Bronze Medal. :lg , -' - u f - Wifi 'i 5 li' l .A - ' 1 i A P ' -:f.f44'- 4'L.f'f . , A - ,L-5 ' l x ' i . '! ' N X 5 XX l Y xqjhw X wg FJ Ns r Kkrw vqiid I? VN - 'fi SK 'wh 9 L7 ,AAL -5 sg R K-6.1 .xbv s.4..,,h, -27x-fx X X. 'LP'- !' Y 'fr y I xgvkx R Lug 0 x -- , Ill! - , hh .. if C x LJ. X 1 fz, N ll E Q I N ft' ' - ' . 1 . - 1 '1 . ,T N'-3 -X Xe N ' IU 7. I '-.aa E Y 5,1 . if n 1 lg :If Jw., '-, ' .54 -1- v ' e- T2 6. , 'J 1 -, f Q, -v-V aa, V F, , Q. , ul-j V . ' x J,-I ir . -ff, V.. X e , , . . U I. xx X .. 3' Q.,-.' V! X 44. 1.7 'A , ii, 5. I . .. , , ' , ' 7 . - lil . ,'.. Ut l fgxl 4, lx A W .ii 1.1 -A -.:,.4,L- yi, Y. V, F lqp 'i l B 3 ,. hi' A! , Ii. 1k'fl1,..'T4 l ll U ifx ,hh Iwi My .114 fi -:S :Ll ls.?1lM!'.ii1lli'-i,,, ll.,-F 1 ' - -:Q . - v Y , , A. A EfEir.2'..: ,i11:lw?f , ' ' ' :ff 4 fm.-.14-f-f '-'ce .sq 1 --M1 1f.,,Mg!'l-.'f! F'1 ':1f,5. fialif. 1 J Q.---L ,+, - ' J' -' w' 'li' ff--ff 539, ,172 51-11 5111- : 4 ,'..,1-. 1 '-'. , Y I ' - 1:7 -' yi, .- fl' MF-' A 7 ffgzl, H, I 5111 .f - 5- Il '. ' -i , . 4 22 2 ' gl' . ' .1341 .7 2 - Q k-'1'- ' cj' d - :eff 1 X e -A lr -J' ff A--fd ' - e v-g, 2, 1 --j-'51 -Y ,' '- ' fd' . 1 ,V -J -f ' - Q V -at ' li r'5 6 7? 1, X.- QM, ,, l . J' ' Q- w.'m3':'fJ G15 .f wp sraw pr Lzzuj 1 T H E .11 U S E ggggw REVOLUTIONS KA play in one adj Scene 1: Time 1932. January. A girl's study: untidyg lights glaring, radio blatting the latest song-hit. Our heroine is seated at a littered desk, pouring over a Modern History text: she is fair, slim, smartly dressed, with her hair tumbled about her face. She is frantically jotting down notes: she yawns. stretches. then glances feverishly at the clock. DOT: Heavens! Eleven o'clock and I'm only at the French Revolution. Why did Miss Cunningham have to give us that test for Monday '? tReads aloud! Paris mob starving and wild, set up barri- cades in the streets, etc. Oh. I'll skip that part. tTurns several pages, reading againzl In Austria, Italy and Germany riots were spreading. Republicans were gaining the upper handg all Europe in chaos. tSlams shut her book and picks up a newspaper, settling com- fortably in her chairl. Reads aloud headline in paper: Shanghai war may involve whole world. Disarmament means little. Oh heck! 'l'hat's as bad as the History. tShe yawns again and finally falls asleep.J Scene 2: Girl asleep in her chair as before. In her dreams the Japanese have not only defeated China, but also all other countries even in- vading Canada. Sweeping through the country, they ravage the main cities, setting up their own customs, installing Japanese government and education. Enter-small group of Japanese troops. They.ransack the room, taking all valuables, and under the direction of their commander build a bon-fire in the fire-place. where they toss her History book, English and French. They tear down the picture of the Prince of Wales. and destroy all books. even a small bible. The eonzmrzncler, a small dwarf of a man. shouts: Down with the English! Away with Canada! Cheering on his men, they take everything of value and depart. Scfnr .ir Malvern Collegiate. a Modern History class. Instead of Miss Cunningham's mild rule, a stormy Japanese is laying down the law: he is tall, angular, with a deep ochre sking long head, and great drooping moustaches. MR. CHOW: I want this class to understand from the beginning that no longer will you study anything pertaining to Britain, or to English speaking countries-that is not important. The History we are interested in is that of the great Japan, with its ancient line ot' lflniperors, its famous peoples, and illustrious doctrines. Take your texts. fHis keen eyes suddely light on Cooke, at the backl. Young man, what is that hook you are so engrossed in? I-101 THE MUSE' COOKE: A Modern History of Europe. Sir! MR. CHOW: Ah! Where did you get that? All European Histories have been confiscated! I will have no interruptions in my class! Get out and stay out! fCooke picks up his books and walks out, as if he was accustomed to being kicked out of History class all the timeb. Mr. Chow pro- ceeds to give a fluent, long-drawn out account of the Ming Dynasty. Suddenly. there is a great commotion in the outer hall. The door is flung open, and Wareham, resplendent in a Malvern cadet uniform, appears, at the head of a regular army of cadets. WAREHAM: Come on everybody! No more Japanese History for us! Mr. Chow I guess we'll have to trouble you to vacate. MR. CHOW: Here. here! What's the meaning of all this? I'll have you expelled for disrespect! WAREHAM: VVhat's that? You don't want to go, eh? Well, come on boys. we'll help him out. But the Jap at that moment with a lighting move. leaped to the window, and there flung a small black object into the room. Before anyone could move. the bomb exploded! There was a terrific noise. and then the sleeping girl awoke! The clock had struck one! She rubs her eyes, and jumps up, dismayed. DOT: Good-night! I've been asleep for over an hour! What a dream! tShe gathers up her books and leaves the roomy -Hur LONGING The poppies sway, The golden asters blow about the wall. And through the day I feel the cool. sad wind of early fall. Last year we two Together viewed the falling of the leaves. Together knew The warmth and colour of the autumn sheaves. Now silence drifts In purple shadows near the rustic gate. And in the mists I want you back, but know it is too late. -HELEN ORAM. H1 l TH E LJULSE. EEL v, .E-L 'ExcHANGI: l ENTLE READERS, don't let our little title illustration mislead you. Our exchanges. we hope, are neither like the Sino-Japanese war nor are they a space in the edition for placing surplus caustic comments. The real purpose is the interchange of ideas tend- ing to stimulate yvell-balanced magazines. We hope it has been ful- tilled. but. barring that. it certainly has been a pleasant task to read Over so many interesting publications. Am-I-m--NORTHERN VOCATION SCHOOL. TORONTO. An excellent magazine for your first attempt. One of our best exchanges. Freshette tfrom back of roomj- May I get a drink, Sir? Teacher trnistaking drink for inkl- I'm sorry. but someone stole my bottle yesterday. Thr L.C.C.I. Roz-z'czv-LONDON CENTRAL COLLEGIATE INSTITUTE. This magazine certainly covers all interests ill your school: a complete edition. Wrfstzrnrd-Ho-WESTERN TECHNICAL SCHOOL. A newcomer to our exchange list, well-balanced. but we suggest cartoons and more jokes. f'f,m11'ng TIIlt'?I'iXfVESTON HIGH AND VOCATIONAL SCHOOL. Not enough reading matter. AII autograph page would be popular. T111 Lmftw-I1-SIR ADAM BECK COLLEGIATE INSTITUTE. LONDON. A big magazine and very comprehensive. Your travel depart- ment is a novel feature and well written up. The circulation of over four thousand is not to be wondered at. Arfrr LZICH-OSHAWA COLLEGIATE AND VOCATIONAL SCHOOL. lYe are glad to exchange with an old friend again a fine maga- zinc. School activities are well covered. Might we suggest a few more cartoons. We can adapt this joke to our school: Mr. Taylor in chemistry- What is the most outstanding con- tribution chemistry has made to modern life? Sam Denby- Blondes. 771-If Tnftlf-r-D.ANrOIe'I'II TEc'HNIcAI, SCHOOL. Everything' in this edition is done with the best taste: small but good. l42l M THE MUSE The Parkdalian-PARKDALE C.I., TORONTO. Many interesting articles. The Battle of 1930-1931 a feature. P.C.I. Student- Have you heard our new school song? The Other- What is it ? P.C.I. Student- 'Chemistry Bluesf The words aren't much, but, oh! the air. The following schools have been added to our exchange and we will have the pleasure of reviewing their editions in our next publications. HARBORD COLLEGIATE INSTITUTE, ToRoNTo. EAST YORK. NORTH BAY COLLEGIATE INSTITUTE. KITCHENER-XYATERLOO COLLEGIATE AND VOCATIONAL SCHOOL. -ED. MCCLLIRE. STAFF CHANGES E are glad to have Miss Ingham back. She has returned after two years' absence due to illness. Your very good health, Miss Ingham! Mr. Clarke is with us again after a lapse. difficult to understand. He went to Jarvis! Miss Sutherland tried us out for a year then accepted a perman- ent appointment. 'We welcome heartily Miss Smeaton. Mr. Burke and Mr. Heisey, who came to Malvern in September. Miss Smeaton is Toronto-born. She taught previously at Morris- burg and at Jarvis C. I. Mr. Burke comes from Guelph. He taught for some years in the Sudbury High and Technical Schools. Mr. Heisey turned from engineering at Kirkland Lake to teach- ing. He was at Niagara before coming to Malvern. Four teachers who were on the staff last year severed their con- nection with us for various reasons. Miss Dafoe resigned after some years of very successful teaching, to marry Mr. William Martin. of Palma. Mallorca. Miss Howard supplied at Malvern for a year and was subse- quently appointed to Parkdale C. I. Lucky Parkdale! Mr. Lucas was appointed last summer to the Ontario Public School Inspectors' Staff and assigned to West Kent District. We con- gratulate him while very much regretting his departure from Malvern. Mr. Farmer taught one year but has given up teaching for a life of more varied interests. -J. M. I43l .. r :,1'! T V ' 1 -zff' I .,,- Q F' .-L..J r ff WW n M WNW? if ,... .M'- ' T T ET ' as , ...- v 'w 'P-fbfgffz: T S fair M ' ' ' --T T 1 f,i,gg:i:.g3,f:f f T 6, lV '.' Q pn' 5 frm f 1 f'? fT 'i'f ' S 0- 4 fl .IN 'ilslfi f' sijyik E. 54. at ff' '.-x ax - 'H ' ' L? elif: '5 f' -K. x , f-. ' V, 252 ' Q .. ef- x 1 1-42' ,. uv?-F 2-: .f if . - A, L H, 227 5 f!!i,' fff'v!','w ' W W J' ll ,1,4H1!Z Z 15 --1-lv ' :lf ,u -M, 2' 4 'T ...!q, ,..-.-':1,jIflL ,, qi ni' L 3 V g b: I A TN 14-Q lp' Ea 946.4 T gli' UW'3'1 yi - A11-'fin ' 'I ng ' ' 1 5:-s 'Lf , r ...- a p-4 ,gihfiq EE! ,' ' QT .- f sie' 1 2 .fl f E-ii - 53.4.9355 in Wi 'I . 'W 'Z gp, 535, n v f -f1:'fUW,: ff' . '-Eigl H' , E:-' ,:Ilf-T, 13 . 5 : + ' I- 11 W' Q Ili I lllllalmlllln Sf - W f2ulf is ' ls 2-4---f E-f.g':un A., Easy V . 'Qi Y i' iiiii'ilil I 'Jr ' J1! N W1 - mI 'm 1 ' ' y1:wmw'!N ?' I-E---!1 !r!mu '- Hulwff K 1I1lfPl3i7f'f',frNffgsmiun. cd-ii-I A TWHH Q.. . WFnml ,,4lnIffllHHnH, IWW W MH . Hmfffl,JfffEH1EfTifH'1ET'f HHQJHH lil..--3 gggjfgirxrfvfif,v1'l,'!l,rUVvlvwmw ,WR Wg 155 gfg,fiQf5mWff, aux:.,rf5fiJ1.!i4',11p5gAfA qgggin N fig - f fw . A J yfgf,,:NN?u ' IwysiiTfluljmaffqgq M 0 fin! ik R 'T M H if ffm ,mix,.-Q'fHlT'f'r1,111jH'54,p1:,gfiff!?!yfTQWmm K :':lg11'f'ff Q 4 ' ' w'wvul13', , 1,yf'gQA,g X , 47 --L , ff f fi' ff fQf I , f if ffgilzjffz ,:f6f ,Y ,-,ff ..f,, 41,-,f ,f IYEL-LCQOCMFOQQ. I MALVERN COLLEGIATE INSTITUTE L SECTION LES BlAl'l.E LEAFSH JOUENT CONTRE LES 'TANADIENS' Pm' Harold Garfield ONSOIR, mesdames et messieurs. Cette eg- belle joute de hockey vous vient ce son' ,, , A x. u4,i......Y.,Y...-.l.1,A ffq gLiLLi3 35e.p::fQt5ek sur l'onde de C.H.R.C. du Forum et est 1714, - X e. .-A4 presentee par courtoisie des fabricants des igE3,,k,,xL,5g ., cigarettes Winchester, d'un melange parfait. if A - pour votre plaisir et votre Ci1V81'tlSSQI'll6Ilt. 'fill 4565 K C'est Foster Hewitt du Daily Star qui an- , .. C nonce. - l lui? i he Le score de la deuxieme periode est de C A vous dis que c'est un jeu tres conteste. ,x Q. i - Q Comme tout le monde sait deja, cette lutte est C is jouee entre les Maple Leafs et les Canadiens. Ali! voila de nouveau les joueurs sur la glace. lfarlmitre laisse tomber Ia rondelle entre les deux joueurs du centre et Lepine uui joue l'aile gauclie le prend: il fait son elan-Chabot tombe a genoux pour arreter la rondelle. L'arbitre met Horner en penitance part-e uu'il llousculait Mondou. Clancy et lllair sont au centre du rond-Oh! Oh! male- ii 53 3.1! if 55 N lip K . . 52 , gi q deux a deux, et on peut me croire quand Je l .' 13, l 1 - ' I , UQ X? diction I Clancy s'est accroche et il ce moment- 55XXLQLW - vi il est ii plat sur le 'dosr Mantha 21. la lx- romlelle. mais Moreuz, letoile du Canadien. K Xif ff' a traverse la ligne bleue avant Mantha: c'est J ll ffap73?Lfl'F' pour-quoi l'arliitre sonne la clochette. Mais f tx roycz donc I! Day et Mondou se battent dans ?1 Ns'4V6g7'Li! un min. Mon Dieu! Ve seront des pugilistes iilfifi uf If W un ds- ces jours. ca saute aux yeux! Les Cami' Q an-llilres ne les voienl pas. Quelle veine! ,Qfff Wt Ai N Horne-r revie-nt au ,ic-u. Finnegan prend la !,,f, eiT,l -3 l'Ollfil,'iil,'-ilfl fait, IVJHSSUI' 21 Gracie, Gracie l't3Il- 9 29,171 1,3 ,Qi fqzgfpf ufrsf,- la 1i41i'l'llSlf, il n'y a que Hainsworth devant lui---Mon Dieu! La foule perd la tetel l 'lol l L L s THEJIVSFL- LLL, Ah! bah! Hainsworth attrape la rondelle dans ses gros gants-c'est tout ei fait comme lui. Il la lance fl2iIlS le coin. Les Montrealais sont contents-et c'est ca! Morenz est tout seul-a la defense-comme ce garcon-la patine! ll se fauiile entre les joueurs de la defense mais ce joueur remarquable. Horner, lui enleve la rondelle. Consternation de Morenz! Maintenant il 3' aura un petit relache pendant qu'on change les joueurs. Darragh, Conacher, et Cotton pour les Leafs: Larochelle. Gagnon pour le Canadien. C'est encore manche at manche. Le match vous vient du poste C.H.R.C. Le jeu recommence Conacher prend la rondelle mais, avant qu'il puisse faire un seul pas, Larochelle la lui enleve pendant que la defense le terrasse. Conacher se met en colerel Darragh prend la rondelle et il la donne 21 Conacher. Conacher se trouve tout seul-au milieu du rond--la joute s'acheve-comme Cona- cher est rapide! Sapristi! Il rend la foule haletante! Conacher patine autour de la defense-tout le monde est debout! Conacher fait un but!!! Et voila la clochette et ainsi la fin du match. Le score final est trois buts pour les Maple Leafs de Toronto contre deux pour les Canadiens. Le recit de cette partie est irradie par le poste--. Image et histoire originelle par JACK KEANE, IIA. Traduction francaise par HAROLD GARFIELD, IVA. HENRIETTE DESROCHES ECRIT A UNE AMIE Par Edith flffllillll Ma mignonne:- C'est aujourd'hui que nous repartons pour Paris. Nous avons passe toute notre lune de mlel en Suisse. Cependant ce n'est pas la premiere fO1S que nous visitons le mont Blanc. Il 5' a cinq mois mon pere, ma mere et moi sommes partis en voyage. Mais Je dols te dire que papa nous promettait ce voyage d9IJLl1S deux ans. Quand nous etions arrives a la gare j'ai reconnu deux jeunes gens, Armand Desroches et Daniel Savary qui m'avaient fait danser au bal du huitieme arrondissement. Je les ai presentes a ma mere et ils lui ont plu. A coup sur ils nous suivaient parce qu'ils tachaient de savoir quelle etait notre destination. et des lors nous les avons rencontres partout. Tous les deux s'eFforcaient de gagner notre estime. Ils faisaient leur possible pour nous plaire et jiai fini par eprouver un sentiment d'admiration pour Monsieur Desroches. Cette admiration s'est changee plus tard en amour at cause d'evenements qui ont montre son courage et son devouement. Quand nous etions en Suisse mon pere est monte a cheval avec des eperons. Le Cheval s'est cabre et mon pere tohl quand j'y pensell I-151 THE JIFSE est tomlne dans un precipice. A ce moment mon cher Armand s'est Glance ot il en a retire mon pere sain et sauf. Quand nous sommes revenus a Paris Armand avait deja demande ma main en mariage a ma mere et Daniel avait fait la meme demande in mon pere. On m'a donne le choix et apres avoir refleclii quelque temps j'ai clioisi Arinaiul. Mais quelle fut ma surprise quand mon pere me dit qu'il aimait mieux Daniel et qu'il en voulait Ei Armand. Mon amant arait compris aussi l'antipathie de mon pere et voulait nous faire ses adieux. Mais je n'aimais pas Daniel et je l'ai dit il Armand. Ju ne comprends pas encore pourquoi mon pere a change d'avis mais ue jour-la il a accepte Armand Comme gendre. Je n'avais jamais lite si lieureusef Quand nous serons installes dans la nouvelle demeure de 111011 mari je serai ravie que tu viennes nous y faire une longue risite. Mon mari. a qui j'ai parle de toi, tient lmeaucoup at faire ta eonnaissance. et moi, je serai tres Iiere de te le presenter. .Ie ralfole de mon nouveau nom qui est celui de mon Cheri. Ton anne alfectueuse signe 2lll.IOLl1'Cl'lllli. QBIADAMEJ ARMAND DESROCHES. 'V' 'Q 1141! ,.,, aj ' ' ' ' lf . - . . 42 - :- ' ...:.-Tva4.g.g., ,ef I - f. 1 --f it -11 QW C 5 -Q., T . - . w- if l --ss. t ' .H 5 ll Y 2 I 4.3.1. Lg 4? l 1 5 6. ,, V . ' 7 . it ' H 1 AL, I-I: , X I - - . X 'L t ' -X X I ' - I A , .., '3-'x , , l ' - ll. - 5-if-f,jE l ' f l f --- f--sf 'ff - ' if-sq, 2 f 1 i .i x L , i ,pf-ffl 5'f16l '3'i 5' lx 1.1 .- f f ' U ,,' ,' X- 1 r 'N ff' ,-.- - . -T f,-,' Q Fgl ,L 'j ,if W D xy. all up f f i . - .:. 'r l, ' -.. -3-'2 ? ' , - 4- - 1'-P' Q , -5 'Y 4' , . sf- MJ- iexxx jig, ' 'f Y 4. 'L--j - -2 My 3 L e e r-U .egqfimie ff?-411 ,-7,1-Efgj,g!,Y,,- - 12-:i'xg,'fI iv, 1 A 5-7 Y 1 ,f :,.Ur'.:-:-N '- fl f fl ' D xii.-i,- 'L ix 721 P- ' qv rlft ullr L, in' 1 WLWFUART :wi LL L li be-lille? QLD L L- EIN BRIEF AN EINEN DEUTSCHEN FREUND Lieber Franz :- Du hast mir einen Brief uber die deutschen Schulen geschrieben und so werde ich Versuchen, die unsrige zu beschreiben. . Unsere Gymnasien sind alle Volkschulen. Keinem Schuler, welcher die erforderliche Berechtigung dazu hat. ist der Eintritt unseren Volk- schulen verweigert. Das aber wird dich wohl nicht interessieren, also werde ich mich einschranken auf dass ich nur eine Beschreibung unserer deutschen Stunde gebe. Ich studiere Deutsch erst nur drei Jahre. denn ich war schon in der dritten Klasse ehe ich es anfing. Zuerst waren unsere Stunden etwas eintonig, aber spater hatten wir unsere Freude daran. dass wir anfingen Marchen und Erzahlungen zu lesen. Eine solche interessante Geschichte ist jene Von-Har0un- el-Raschid, dem beruhmten Kaliph von B-rdad. Der Kaliph hatte ein geheimnisvolles Pulver untergeschluckt womit Menschen sich in Tieren verwandeln konnten. Also anderte er sich in einem Storche. Als Tier, diirfte man nicht lachen sonst wiirde man in der Gestalt eines Tieres bleiben. Der Kaliph lachte und ist seitdem Konig der Storchen geblieben. Bald ging es mir mit dem Unterricht ganz anders. Ich musste englische Satze ins Deutsche iibersetzen. Solche Aufgaben habe ich nicht gern und oft wunschte ich, dass wir nur Lustspiele und Erzah- lungen lesen diirfen. Gestern abend kam ein Musikfest, das ich deutlich horte. durch die Luft von Deutschland uber das Ozean zu uns her. Es war sehr komisch als der Redner sagte, O.K., Vinchellf' Die deutsche Lieder sind sehr melodisch. Nun aber, wieder zur Schule! Manchmal habe ich die Gelegenheit gehabt zu lachen. Vor ein paar Tagen, hat ein Knabe gesagt, Nehmen Sie das :zz lzool aus dem Satze herausf' Zoo bedeutet eine Menagerie. Der Lehrer hat auch etwas klug gesagt, aber es war auf Englisch. Er erlangte von einem Schiiler etliche Beispielen von Satzen verschiedener Arten. Der Knabe antwortete: John is sick. Is John sick? Sic 'em, John. IVir haben ein Lustspiel, Der Bibliothekarf' studiert. Die Hauptpersonen sind zwei junge Burschen, namens Lothair Mac- donald und Harry Marsland. Ein jeder hatte einen Onkel. Der Onkel Lothairs war ein wenig verruckt. Er glaubte, dass irgend ein junger Mann austoben sollte, ehe er anstandig leben konnte. Der Onkel Harry's war nicht verruckt, aber er hatte eine liebliche Tochter die erst siebzehn Jahre alt war. Er fiirchte. dass Harry sich mit seiner Cousine heiraten wollte. l47l 1 v THE JILSEA7 if Y' img Die jungen Leute hatten einen Glaubiger, namens Gibson, der sich fur einen Gentlemen hielt. ob er gleich nur ein gemeiner, aber reicher Schneider war. Dieser will die Jungen in Schuldgefangnis setzen und es gibt eine komische Mannjagd. Unterdessen wird Lothair Bibliothekar bei Harry's Onkel. Lothair und Harry fingen an der Cousine und ihrer Freundin den Hof zu machen. Bald fand eine komisehe Unordnung statt, die nur ein Ende nahm, nachdem die ganze Sache ins Reine gebracht wurde. Dann gibt es zwei Verlobungen, Harry mit der Freundin, Lothair mit der Tochter des besten Freundes seines Onkels. Bald darauf folgten zwei Hochzeiten. Die Beiden Onkel waren ganz zufrieden und bezahlten die Rechnungen. Die ,iungen Ehepaare 1ebten gliicklieh immer her. Es wiirde mir ein wahres Vergnugen gewahren, einen anderen Brief von dir zu bekommen. Griisse mir deine Eltern. Dein treuer, S. SHANKMAN. A FLIGHT OF FANCY The far-off sound of a moving train Comes to me weirdly through the rain, Now strong and full. Then faint and dull: And its whistle shrieks an eerie song As the panting engine forges along. And. as I listen, I'm on that train Rushing along with it through the rain Into the sunlight, Golden and brightg Going to lands that I'ye longed to see: To distant climes where I've pined to be. Past lofty mountains, cloaked in snowy Down to the verdant vales belowg By lake and sea, O'er marsh and leag Through bustling cities, by silent hills, 'Mid waving grain, and whirling mills. The dream fades quickly into the gloom Of a dreary winter's afternoon, And far away To my dismay, Sounds the scornful hoot of the dashing train, And I'm left to my hopes and wishes again. -MADGE PRICE. I W l V. T H 2--.fl!,Q 5 Emswsyki - MALVERN HOME AND SCHOOL CLUB OOKING back over the past year's work, the president and officers of the Malvern Home and School Club feel that they have success- fully completed many of their undertakings but have much to accomplish in the coming year. One of our greatest problems is keep- ing alive the interest the parents have felt in their child's life during the public school period. A great many mothers and fathers feel that when their children enter the secondary school that they are indeed growing up and do not need the same sympathetic understanding as formerly in their school life.. The Home and School Club offers the parents an opportunity of taking an interest not only in the academic, but also in the athletic and social life which is so much a part of the High School student's education. We gave our annual graduates dance on the night of Commence- ment: over three hundred students were invited, and we are sure that they will carry away with them very happy memories of Malvern. We are planning a banquet for the winning rugby teams on March 18th. A S500 bond was purchased last spring and the interest on it, amounting to 315, was presented to Miss Madge Price. the first winner of the Quarter Century Scholarship. Next Commencement, the inter- est will S25. and with the aid of the parents we soon hope to reach our objective of S50 each year. We are planning the purchase of another S100 bond. With the permission of Mrs. Rogers we have called the Mathematical award the William Henry Rogers Medal, and it, with the Dr. Lingwood Latin Medal, was given at Commencement. We also gave silver and bronze medals for oratory to both girls and boys. The Programme Committee have arranged very interesting meet- ings and can ask outstanding speakers to address our club if we can be assured of a sufficiently large audience to make it worth their while to come to us. A by-law was passed by the Ontario Federation of Home and School Clubs that every club to be in good standing must pay 10c per member to the Federation. This money will be used for the support of the central office and for extension work in rural districts where funds are low. To meet this, our club found it necessary to increase their fee to 35c. We ask for the coming year a more active co-operation and in- terest from all the parents in our various activities. --EDNA N. VVALKINSHAW, President. H01 TIJE' Jll'SET nv Hmm . . E501 v THE MUSE ' 'si'f l i511 Ag ggTHE MUSE ALUMNI l - HE Grad's of '31 have Q V' gone,theh'paths have dr v T .3 verged and they have left l I ' 1 Malvern's paternal walls, and T g have sallied forth to battle T 'jfitc' -T51 'c with life armed with tive ' A' .J 'P year's training. But though 1 'swf 'J they no more stroll through A W the halls of their Alma Mater l f. ll ,im ',., ,QQ they will never be forgotten, 'K for they form a link in. Mal- , vi 4 vern's glorious past, without ,, '42 ,4g.,igY44,y4,' ,, 'r ' - g which the chain were incom- T - , plete. Thus, we take this op- f' S V - '4 ' ' L, K A portunity of making known to 1 A W H 'jf you the activities which many i J.- . ., of your former friends and ' ,A f ' M' colleagues pursue. am- I ., W wa. v , - g f - A number of last year's ' ' , ' f illustrious fifth despairing A over the much discussed weak- aywge nesses of modern youth. felt disposed to prepare them- selves to take coming generation in hand and for this purpose are attending Normal School. These inspired students are Charley Box, Betty Brownlee, James Davey, Kathleen Geddes, Harry McArthur, Thelma Parker, Sarah Siegel. Muriel lVellar, Margaret VVestlake and Rowan 'Wilson. Ernest Aeberli and John Birrel are studying at Varsity, while Mimi Gould, Elizabeth Kennedy and Dorothy Schauflier are also ex- periencing the first thrills of college life. Helen Duke and Phyllis Reid are training at St. Michael's, While Helen Curliss is practising the noble profession at the General. Cleeve Horne is following the natural trend of his genius at the College of Art. Betty Oakes and Mary Starr, feeling that financial circles will provide the greatest scope for their activities, are now employed in the Canada Life, while Dorian Wray and Gertrude McGregor have enlisted the help of Shaw's before making their debut into the world of secretaries and stenographers. Margaret Wilson and Reginald Watters are, of course, taking advantage of the scholarships which they won. We wish them every success! Ruth Philips and Ruth Reed are at Gregg's Business College. l 52 l THE MUSE The students of the past year certainly seem to have upheld Malvern traditions and to have been successful in their attempts to establish themselves in the world, but this success has not merely been confined to last year's pupils as clearly shown by an extract from a letter which Elizabeth Harris, a graduate of Malvern, writes to us. ln an all too short visit with Miss Barr. I inadvertently consented to jot down a few of the events in my life since leaving Malvern. Where to start is indeed a simple enough matter, but what to say and when to stop is quite a different one. On the day of my last matriculation examination I returned to St. Louis to live. In the fall of 1924 I entered Washington University. which is located in St. Louis. Four years later I graduated-some what wiser, no sadder, and much richer in the friends and knowledge which I had acquired. Another year was spent in graduate study, but it was not until June, 1930, that I received the degree of Master of Science. Immedi- ately after finishing my work at the university I became an engineer- ing assistant with the Southwestern Bell Telephone Company, which position I still occupy and enjoy. There are many others no less worthy of attention than those noted here, whom we would have liked to mention, but as space does not permit we may only express to one and all sincere desires for their future fortune. -DOROTHY BELL. IN THE WOODS Blue patches far above the rustling green, Gold sunlight on the dark stem of the pine, Brown fragrant needles, glossed with satin sheen, Sweet silence-and this magic hour is mine. Two butterflies are flickering in the blue, Two little flames, all shining bronze and gold, Two living bits of sunlight, fluttering through Where more light is than all the leaves can hold. Across the branches of a fallen tree A fragile, trembling, spider web is spun, All soft and pearly gray, and fair to see, All flashing opal fire in the sun. Here is no care, but loveliness and 1'est. Here Beauty walks, in misty green and gray, Here is the heart by perfect peace possessed, And quiet joy, that will not slip away. -RUTH SHEPARD. 5531 V. . ,. 5,-3-1, 'L-3,w '-t' 3 -.X N 4 9'.' , Q if ,V , .,..-to L ' ,A lk - ...K -H z. -,5 5,1 ' I' 'N Is 5' ' f .' a Q 16. 1' J '. .a,. - . ' 1 , 2' , - , , . W 'u -N' N , - I A '94 R , .3 ,t 4 I In - v., f AT ITS ' BEST At Danforth Radio you will always find the best in radibv 5 Convenient Payments ' No Interest. 0 DANFQBQIERBADIO 581 Daolorth Ave. 2086 Danforth Ave. 537 Bloor St. W GRov. 2141 GErl'. 7772 MEI. 2180 SCOT'l'Y CAWKWELL Ontario Sporting Goods and Radio LIMITED SPORTING GOODS FOR ALL OCCASIONS CLUB SWEATERS AND SWEATER COATS A SPECIALTY RADIOS Sonora Svparton Atwater Kent Stromberg-Carlson WE MEET THE BIG STORES FOR 2076 Queen Street E. 'Room 214. Empire Bldg. ' H0ward 0790 ' ELI!!! 2773 ' ', s 4 ,. f' 1 A .2 If 5 nmfjlal RADID .- ' THE MUSE g. Q Q Q ff I V 2 2 U U Q V fr ? Q 1 t 4 1 3 Q 7 i A L' t X . 'D ,Q 32 2 -- 15 A 'Q f : I o f . o L i . Q 1-W' Q! S f l it i I DCIETI Honorary President ....................... Miss E. McGregor President ................... ................ J ack Pond lst Vice-President ...... ....... G eorge XVatson 2nd XvlC6-ll1'8Slflt'lll ..... ....... R uth Shepard Secretary ................... ...... D orothy Bell Treasurer ...... ..... ............. ........ ..... F 1 ' z ink Rook HH the six years preceding 1931 the Literary Society had confined its activities to public meetings held in the auditorium. Last year however. Interest Groups were organized in the Society in an en- wamiii' to create more enthusiasm. ' This year through an experience the executive has found that the pupils want the clubs to remain. but at the same time desire that sex eral public meetings he held. Un the afternoon of January 1-1. a number of scenes from differ- ent Shakespearean dramas were presented in the school auditorium I-y Alan Wilkie and Miss Hunter Watts of Australia. The Iirst public meeting of the Literary Society took place on Tut-sday. February 23. A very fine programme was arranged. The in-vu Malvern Song rendered hy the Girls' Club was a complete success. Alix Silcox, a well-known lecturer throughout United States and Vanarla, entertained the audience with an interesting talk on The Two Americas. The Iiraniatic Vluh. under the direction of Miss McGregor, pre- sented a play entitled A Night At An Inn. The number of Interest Groups has been limited to tive: Drama- tic. Art, Debating. Nature and Science, and Poetry. I5-4l THE MUSE In conclusion we extend to Miss McGregor our sincere thanks for her kindly counsel and encouragement. We are grateful to those of the staff who have assisted the various clubs and to Principal Carl Lehmann for his courtesy at all times to the executive of the Literary Society. VVith the whole school solidly behind us we are looking for- ward to the future with increased confidence. -J. POND. THE POETRY CLUB Adviser ..................................................... Miss Ingham President ......... ....... H elen Oram Secretary .................................................. Gladys Neale The Poetry Club meets twice a month under the leadership of Miss Ingham. At one meeting the original work of the members is read, criticized and discussed. The other meeting is for the study of some poet. on whose life one of the members prepares a paper. The first meeting of the month is held at the school. while the second may be held elsewhere. Last year we had a particularly delightful meeting at the Public Library, where an open fireplace added to our enjoyment. We are hoping for a similar meeting in the near future. -G. NEALE. DRAMATIC CLUB Adviser ......... ................................... R Iiss MacGregor President .................. ......... E d. McClure Business Manager ...... ...... H azel Godwin Secretary ................................................ Lydia Orlando The Dramatic Club this year is certainly not dragging through the general depression, on the contrary, ours is a period of boom and our programme has been fully carried out. 1 Two short plays are to be produced, and at our fortnightly meet- ings a representation of contemporary drama has been read. Our members are fairly familiar now with the works of Ibsen. Shaw. Rostand, Galsworthy and Maeterlinckg these great play- wrights having provided many interesting hours of reading up in S. We feel sure the club this year has been a success and we hope that Malvernites in the future will have the same splendid opportunity to develop their dramatic yearnings under Miss MacGregor's skilled supervision. -ED. MCCLURE. E551 THE MUSE DEBATING CLUB Mr. Bailey, the convener of the Debating Club, called the mem- bers ot' the club to its iirst meeting early in December. Art Irwin and Nora Cotton were appointed to the respective positions of presi- dent and secretary. The policy of promoting inter-form debating was again adopted. The work of the club began the iirst week of January. with the desire to complete all inter-form debating by the end of February. Due to unforeseen delays this idea was not carried out fully. However, the Lower and Middle School finals will take place sometime before Easter. The Debating of the Lower School teams has shown better results than those of the Middle School, due to a greater interest displayed by the Lower School pupils. The executive hope that the Middle and Upper School pupils will show a greater interest next year. Following up Principal Lehmann's appeal for increased interest in public speaking the executive suggest that public speaking be con- sidered as a work of the club. We also feel that a larger executive is needed if inter-form debating and public speaking are to become its work next year. Debating this year has produced splendid results from the stand- point of improved oratorical ability among the contestants. Many future lawyers and politicians, etc.. are appearing among the debaters. The executive wishes to thank Mr. Bailey, Bill Stewart and Bruce Mcforkell of 5C, and the staff, for their support and co-operation. -N. COTTON. THE NATURE AND SCIENCE CLUB The Nature and Science Club is in the middle of what appears to be a very successful season. The ofiicers of the club, who are as fol- lows: C'y Quartermain, President 3 Dave McNulty, Vice-President 1 and Doug. Austen. Secretary, have rounded out a programme which has as its object the disbursement of scientific knowledge and the creation of interesting side lights on school studies. So far this year the club has held three meetings, in the form of a trip to the Hoyt Metal Co., a talk by Prof. Moore, and an open meeting conducted by the members themselves. In closing I would like to pass along a suggestion to the executive ot' next years club. There should be a closed membership of those interested in science and nature study, as a small number of interested students can derive more benefit from the meetings than a great num- ber of inditi'eren.t members. -D. C. AUSTEN. IBIVI . THE JIVSE THE ART CLUB This year's Art Club has been organized more as a class than at club. At the tirst meeting it was decided to elect no officers, the entire time of every member being spent in proiitable work rather than talk- ing and planning. This lack of formality has produced a much larger membership than that of former years. At the first meetings the members of the Club began figure draw- ing in pencil, but with the acquisition of colour sets they swung into the more interesting still life painting in oil colours. Under the pains- taking guidance of Miss Knight they have surprised themselves with the quality of the work produced. There has, of course, been the usual group of students interested in clay modelling. They have made good use of the time spent in this work. If a suflicient general interest is aroused the Club hopes to spon- sor several talks by recognized Canadian artists, to be held in the audi- torium. This. of course. depends on the support of the entire school rather than on the Art Club itself. With the coming of warm weather the members expect to spend some time on outdoor sketching trips. These should produce some sketches worthy of a place over the mantel as well as providing a good deal of fun. -F. K. THE ORCHESTRA EXECUTIVE Honorary President ..........................., Miss Muirhead President ....................................... ......... E thel Hanks Secretary .......... . ....... Lloyd Kippen Treasurer ................................................. Arnold Vitek Conductor .................................................... Mr. Brown UR orchestra is having a very successful year under the able leadership of Mr. Brown, who has given much of his time in past years. Malvern is indeed fortunate in having such an enthusiastic and talented musical leader. Our opportunities of displaying our achievements have been con- siderably extended. For the first time there have been two assemblies per week instead of the usual weekly assembly. In this way we have been able to increase our contributions to these meetings. As in former years, our orchestra contributed the musical activi- ties at Commencement. We were also instrumental in making the annual Parents' night a success. It is unfortunate that there is no occasion in the latter part of the school year when we could further show our accomplishments. The enthusiasm of all has been demonstrated by the whole- hearted attendances at practices and assemblies, and everyone has benefitted to a large extent by the instruction and experience. Barbara Roberts. who acted as pianist of the orchestra, gradu- ated last year. and appreciation of her services and enthusiasm should be recorded here. -E. HANKS. l57l THE .llI'SE , sg ii i .,- - - l. Eiga efiissa I' lil il? l ' f ' f ' A ., -vi il - - i 4 .. SOCIAL O far this year we have had three tea dances at the school. The first one was under the auspices of the Girls' Athletic Society and was held in December. The Literary Society sponsored the next which was held in the middle of January. The Muse was re- sponsible for the third one which took place near the end of February. They were all fairly well attended and I am sure everyone who was there had a good time. Jack Cooke's orchestra was in attendance at all the tea dances. The annual ex-pupils dance was held this year on February the twelfth. There was quite a large crowd present and everybody seemed to enjoy themselves. A coloured spotlight playing on the dancer as they swayed to the rhythm of Harry Bedlington's Savarin orchestra completed a very pretty picture. In the cafeteria which was prettily decorated with red and white streamers, as was the auditorium. a delightful supper was served. The graduates dance which is given each year by the ladies of the Home and School Club to the fourth and fifth forms of the pre- vious year was certainly a success. Everybody who could possibly come did and those who failed to attend missed a wonderful evening. The Blue Rhythm Boys supplied the music and did it very well. I am sure that I will be seconded by everyone who was present as I now move a vote of thanks to the ladies of the Malvern Home and School Club for the delightful evening which was made possible for so many ot' us by their unfailing kindness. Commencement was held on an afternoon about the middle of November. Mr. Lehmann delivered a speech telling of the athletic and academic honours by our students in the past years. Mr. Hilton, Mr. Loftus Reid. and Mr. Brandon each made a few remarks which -.vcre followed by the presentation ot' diplomas, prizes, and athletic awards. Edgar Guest then told us in his own inimitable way of rugby, past and present. The bust of Mr. Lehmann which Cleeve Horne modelled last year was formally presented to the school. Our valedictorian this year was Reginald Watters and his subject was My live years at Malvern . -Doam LEARIE. NNI TH .ll FSE 4 N K ZF? 'Yi 'V O! .. S A I-gl i tc ' iii ,G its - Iii G . Y ix -N gf i 5' A Rf I? 1 i svn Q Tr.. IYIALVE Advisory Otlin-er ....... President ................ Vice-President ....,. ICxEt'L'i'1x'E Miss Muirhead Gladys Kippen .....,..Helen Philips Secretary ......... ...... D oris Bailey Treasurer ..... ..... . loan Fraser t 'oNyENEHs Si. Be ins ..... ...... Q Nlaud Godfrey btunt ........................ Nom Cotton Jr. Beans ....,. . ,... Amy Schauther Sr. Swimming .......... Kay MCCi'ea Glee Clulv .................... Miss Russel Jr. Swimming Eleanor Roberts Social Service ....,... Lorraine Lush Pusiness Mgr ............... Violet Lee Miss Cuiinimzhuni Publicity .................. Mudge Price Interest Groups. Edith Stansiield First Aid ................. Edith Martin Social ..... .....,.. 3 lzu'guret Sinden llZllTtllL'l'2ll-'K ..... lst Form Reps Pizinist ....... .........Betty Fisher Miss Sutherland ....,.........LYIl3 Boyd Ruth Gordon ......Ethel Hunks THE .11 USE p MAIDS OF MALVERN HIS year the Maids of Malvern activities began with a Big and, Little Sister Party. The new cabinet was introduced by the former president. Ruth Cunningham. A welcome was extended to all. during which the club's activities and purpose were explained, and the new motto. Come, Enter In, the Gate Is Open Wide, was given as the theme for this year. After theprogramme, the Big Sisters put their Little Sisters through an initiation and all were rewarded with refreshments in the cafeteria. The party was happily concluded with dancing. The following two weeks were devoted to the membership cam- paign which resulted in two hundred and fifty girls joining the Maids of Malvern. The annual hike was held in October and took the form of a hare and hound chase. The girls were divided into groups of countries with a leader for each. After supper two of the groups put on a play and a Charade around the camp fire which were greatly enjoyed by the girls. Everyone took part in the candle-lighting ceremony about the large tire. The president lit her candle by the tire and passed on the light to each leader as a symbol of the ideals and purpose of the club. The leaders then lit the candles of the mem- bers, and singing FOLLOW the GLEAM they wound in and out the trees in a single great circle. The hike was closed with TAPS, and a tired yet happy band of girls turned homeward. Near the end of October a Take a Chance meeting was held for the purpose of signing up for interest groups. The group leaders each explained her group and the stunt group favoured us with a charade. In November we held a Deportment Meeting at which a debate, Resolved that Pupils were of Better Deportment in the Past than in the Present. was successfully carried on by Frankie McClung, Eileen Berril, and Edith Martin, Vera Whittell. A satire on deportment was given by the stunt group. Club pins were presented to Una Boyd, lA, and Ruth Gordon, IH. for 'having highest percentage in membership campaign. At the close of the meeting we gave out dolls to be dressed by the girls and used for Christmas stockings. On December the eleventh a Tea Dance was held in aid of relief work. Due to the hearty response of the school we succeeded in rais- ing forty dollars for social service at Christmas and throughout the winter. Our Christmas meeting in December took place in the darkened auditorium, lighted only by wall lights and candles. A play, The Christmas Guest was prettily acted by the stunt group. The Glee Vlub sang a group of four carols. one of them French, which delighted the girls. Miss Burton, general-secretary of the Y.W.C.A. gave us an in'eresting account of Christmas in other lands, and brought the meeting to a close with a Vesper Service. The girls were given candy canes upon leaving. , fnilll THEg MUSE In January the annual inter-form stunt contest was held. in which each year competed for the cup. The stunts showed excellent merit and the rivalry was keen. The fourth formers won the cup this year with the stunt 1066g and All That . On February we are having a Birthday Party celebrating the club's twentieth birthday. It is to take the form of a masquerade with the girls dressed in children's costumes if possible. We hope the girls will have a jolly evening in dancing, games, and entertain- ment. Later on in the month when there is enough snow, we will have a sleighing party. which will leave the school in sleighs and return to the cafeteria for refreshment. The Annual Mother and Daughter Banquet will be held on April. the fifteenth. YVe thank the staff very much for their kindly interest in all our activities. and the members for their line co-operation. Without this support we could have done little towards making the Maids of Mal- vern a success this year. -G. K. BEANS Members of the Maids of Malvern regard Beans as one of the many reasons for being glad they are High School girls. There we meet girls from other schools. play, laugh and talk with them. At every Beans we learn something of friendship and sports- manship. Beans is held every third Friday at the Y.W. on McGill Street. The supper tickets which are 25c. each may be bought from your Beans Representative. Each one of us has some particular interest at Beans. Perhaps it is swimming or playing in the gym. perhaps it is speaking to new friends or the little talks and readings. Girls who like dramatics find an opportunity to do something for their school by helping to produce a skit at the Beans stunt competition. At the annual song Beans a cup is presented for the best original school song. As you all know Mal- vern won this for 1931. This year we gained second place. Then there is the swimming meet. Points gained in these competitions as well as good attendance at Beans and in the Gym. count towards the Ryrie Trophy which is presented annually to the best all-round girls' club afliliated with the Y.lV.', The Maids of Malvern had the honour of winning this highly prized award last year and you can help to keep it at Malvern by taking an active interest in the club activities. especially those connected with Beans . It seems to me that in years to come when we recall our High School days, Beans nights will be remembered among the happiest of the many incidents enjoyed at Malvern. LMAUD GODFREY. I G1 1 THE MUSE CAMP Tapawingo-which is Indian for Place of Joy-is the name of the camp. which is near Parry Sound on Georgian Bay. And it cer- tainly is a Place of Joy to the girls from the Toronto high schools, who camp there together after examination time in the city is over. There is everything to make any kind of a girl happy-a morning dip to pep you up, a longer swim in the afternoon. hikes, games of baseball and volley ball, boat trips, canoeing, interest groups such as nature study, handicraft, reading and dramatics, and then in the evening the campfire or perhaps some other interesting program- a stunt night or a masquerade. Some of us perhaps will remember longest the quiet time in the morning that each camper spends alone. Just a few moments set apart for thinking. Or perhaps some of us will remember the even- ings around the campfire as we watched the stars come out or when we joined hands about the slowly dying camp-fire to sing Good-night and Taps , We remember these times the longest because it is at such times. that we come to understand better the magic spell of camp which makes life more interesting, more worth while and more oi' an adventure for us. Where the dark forests clasp the shore, Leaning low. Where the soft breezes watt bird lore. To and fro. Where the ripples break and beat. Where blue sky and forest meet, Where the air is fresh and sweet Let us go. -A. E. S. MAIDS OF MALVERN INTEREST GROUPS The Social Service group under the leadership of Lorraine Lush and Miss Cunningham have done splendid relief work this year. At Christmas they sewed and filled over fifty large stockings, and through the splendid response of the pupils have sent five large bundles of clothing to the Neighborhood Workers for distribution. .lust now they are busily engaged in sewing babies' layettes for a needy family, whom they have undertaken to look after till summer, sending a hamper of food each week. Throughout the Winter more clothing would be gratefully accepted. The First Aid group with Edith Martin in charge and Miss Gt-otlinan as instructor have completed five of their interesting les- sons in home nursing. One of the meetings will be open to the school ni which a doctor will illustrate the method of resuscitation. It is to be hoped that the pupils will respond heartily to this worth-while meeting. 14321 THE MUSE g The Stunt Group under the excellent management of Nora Cot- ton has done yeoman service this year. They put their Christmas play on at the and will take part in the junior and senior stunt contests there in March. The Handicraft group has had as yet only two meetings, but under the direction of Betty Fisher and Miss Sutherland will likely accom- plish much in the arts of interior decorating, and we hope they will be free to make the favours for our coming banquet. The Swimming groups, junior led by Eleanor Roberts, and senior led by Kay McCrea have had several meetings at the The junior girls have taken part in the swimming meet, and we hope that more girls will enter the senior meet in March. nuns The Glee Club under the able leadership of Miss Russell have taken part in the club programme and helped with the new school song which won second place at the competition in January. We are hoping to hear from them again in the near future. -GLADYS KIPPEN, MLC. LEAVES Along a path, beneath the trees, There lies a pile of fallen leaves. Both beautiful And wonderful, As they rustle gently 'neath the breeze. The wind swoops down and slowly lifts The leaves about, in lustrous driftsg And to and fro They gently blow, Most beautiful of nature's gifts. In spring their tiny buds peeped thro', In summer. were of greenish hueg Till, summer gone And autumn on. They fall, to show the sky's deep blue. -HELEN SEWEL, ZC. L 133 I THE lll SI 1 1 Compliments of OLD BOY CHUCK MCCREA OF Giles, Rice CSL Peters QB CHEVROLET A AND MCLAUGHLIN D E A L E R S WI? DANFORTH AT MAIN - Grover 2124 DUNDAS AT BLOOR - Ll dbrook 2111 We Can't Sell All the Cars So We Only Sell the Best O.K. USED CARS l J THE .ll LISE f W g Y Www-H ff K rw . 1 , ' iff M fs .. u 5 ' Q E 4!' 1 tr.. lxl ' 22 f?7p ?'fET li.. i ijjifp ,f--ff? '27 ' CYS' ATHLETICS EXECUTIVE Honorary President ..........,........... ....... ll flr. A. Hisey President ................... Secretary Treasurer ....... Bon Ponngu our Senior High School Rugby ........Robert Porter ........Lloyd Nourse Quartermain NOTHER year of sport has roll- ed by and still the Red and Black colours are flying high. The name Malvern , in all sporting activities has always -remained sym- bolic of clean play. sportsmanship and perseverance ever since the first day that it appeared in competition. Perseverance is one thing which has always stood well above all others in Malvern play. There never has been a sign of giving in until the final whistle has been blown. For years Malvern has been battling up-hill and in the last few years these efforts have been rewarded. We may be just- ly proud of our records as they are the result of many years of persistent endeavour. This year we successfullly defended Championship and thus made it three IGH THE MUSE years in a row that Malvern has been on top. This record will take some few years to beat. Our Juniors with a practically new team kept up the old Malvern habit of being close, only to be edged out by Park- dale Collegiate who subsequently became city champions. The 125- pound team entered the finals in their division only to lose by a five to nothing score. This promises great things for next year's Junior team. Hockey did not give us any championships but it certainly showed that Malvern is always in the game fighting. Lacrosse and basket- ball, two games that might easily be played at Malvern were sadly neglected last year. Many of our students are playing star parts in these games but for outside clubs. We would certainly like to see both these games encouraged at Malvern. RUGBY We have enjoyed a great season in Rugby this Fall. The Senior team again won the High School Rugby Championship while the Jun- iors despite their lack of experience were only put out after reaching the semi-finals. Our Junior Team battled hard in every game, and considering the fact that only two or three had played Junior Rugby before, they were remarkably good. They gained their place in the semi-iinals after beating Eastern Commerce the Central group winners. They held Parkdale Collegiate so well that the game was undecided until the last second. They were out-weighed and played in a sea of mud. We can certainly hope for at least a good Junior Team next year and may it have the same fighting spirit that carried the team of 1931 on. This year's Senior Team was one of the most evenly balanced, smoothest-working outfits that Ted Reeve has ever produced. One may receive some idea of the strength of this team when we say that in four league games, a semi-final, and final, they scored one hundred and forty-six points against eleven. Eight of the eleven points scored against them were in the final game. It seemed too bad that such a team should not have been allowed to represent Toronto in the Pro- vincial Finals. But that cannot be helped and it always seems better to finish the season victorious. To pick out individual stars on either team would be impossible. The star of stars and the reason for our success is Ted Reeve. He has created among the fellows a spirit of friendship and co-operation which may be called the stick, gang stick spirit. Teddy gave to all of us the happiest moments of our lives and who else can do that? To lose such a coach, as is threatened, would be a blow not only to Malvern but to High School Rugby as well. We can never thank him enough for his unseltlsh work but we can wish him the best of luck, health, wealth, and happiness. f +35 J i TgH E' U gg g gig H wr HOCKEY Our Senior Hockey Team certainly did not finish in first place this year: hut there was no sign of quitting shown. They fought every game until the last bell just as if it meant a championship. The boys were just as jubilant over their tirst goal scored as Jarvis ever felt in winning tl'e league title. That's Malvern spirit and that's what makes champions later on. We hope to see better luck next year. The Junior Team has qualified for the finals which have yet to he played. We wish them the best of luck. -BOB PORTER. TRACK AND FIELD Senior Champion ........................... William Wareham Intermediate Champion ..... ....... . Hubert Lawson Junior Champion ............. ..............., R ay Robson Mile Champion .............................. Cyril Quartermain T the annual field-day of Malvern Collegiate Institute in 1931 much promising athletic material was discovered. The interest in this particular branch of sport has been steadily increasing, and last year Malvern boasted the largest track team in her history. The local meet was featured by a brilliant display of sprinting by William Wareham and Frank Rook, veteran members of the team, who captured all the sprint events in the senior and intermediate classes respectively. Both boys have been prominent in city and pro- vincial championships for some years, and were the heavy scorers for Malvern in outside competition. Hubert Lawson displayed surprising strength in the jumps. making a clean sweep of the field events in his class, and thus winning the intermediate silver trophy. Ray Robson defeated a large number of contestants in the junior class by showing the greatest individual versatility of any member of the team. He won the junior title by virtue of first or seconds in practically every event on the programme. Robson's specialty is the running high jump in which he has attained a height of 5' Z . R. Andres, a recent addition to the team from Chicago. smashed the record for the shot-put with a splendid put of over 41 feet. In the Ontario Athletic Commission Meet for the Toronto and District Championship at Varsity Stadium Andres broke the Toronto record but was in turn defeated by a very narrow margin. He had the same experience in the Ontario Championships. again breaking the record only to lose first place. We expect lVIalvern will win its first Ontario title in the 19232 meet in this event if Andres continues to improve. The best event of' the local field-day was the mile run, which was bitterly contested by C. Quartermain and H. lVIorgan, who easily out- diftanced a splendid field to stage a thrilling last-lap sprint for the tape, Quartcrmain winning by a narrow margin. Both runners repre- ftztsj THE MUSE sented the school at the Board of Education Games at Exhibition Park. and in a field of 15 runners the Malvern M placed second, Quartermain. and third, Morgan. The event was won by the peren- nial champion, Elliott, of Central Tech, who was forced to a new record by the Malvern boys in their closing challenge. Morgan pro- vided the biggest thrill for Malvernites when he judged a beautiful race in the mile run at Varsity Stadium. He held back in the early stages and then closed in on the leader in an amazing gun-lap sprint. which only failed by inches to win for him the Toronto and District Championship. In competition with all Secondary Schools in Toronto Malvern scored more points than ever before, although the total consisted of seconds and thirds only. However. the team gave promise of steady improvement, and in 1932 we expect several individual titles in addi- tion to a greatly increased point total. The following boys who qualified for the Malvern Cl. Track Team by placing first or second in the local meet represented Malvern in the Ontario Athletic Commission meet at the University of Toronto Stadium. and in the Board of Education meet at Exhibition Park: William Wareham, Hubert Lawson, Ray Robson. Cyril Quarter- main. Hilliard Morgan. Robert Andres, Frank Rook, Robert Milne. Ernest McWilliams. lan MacMillan. Alex. Garvin. A. Hudson. Jack Wilson. Keith Warner. Harold Amey. Robert Crapper. Harry Turner. Gordon Lowry. Mr. Crozier. of the moderns department. was the coach of the team. u -J. K. C. SHOOTING N the season of 1930-31 Malvern had two fine rifle teams. Most of the credit is due to Mr. Lucas and to Mr. Blakeley, who coached the teams. Although a number of medals were won by some of the individual members of the team. Malvern did not win any championship. ln the Mason Trophy Competition. Malvern was not very successful. Harry MacArthur won the Strathcona Medal in his competition. The following won medals in the Dominion of Canada Rifie Asso- ciation competition: Special Ciass-Harry MacArthur for first prize. The remaining won medals for over ninety per cent.-H. Gillis. K. O'Brien, J. Wilson. S. Hutchings. D. Pike, H. Galster, C. Horne, F. Botsford. R. Grant, D. Milner. G. Downer and Jack Standing. We also entered in the Dominion Marksmen Shoot. Many boys won badges. both bronze and silver. This year instead of a Junior and Senior team we are only having one team. Mr. Blakeley will again direct us. The team will contest for some cups which will add to the enthusiasm of the team. I wish all the members of the team luck for the coming year, and may I be the first to congratulate the winner of the cup. -JACK B. STANDING. E67 l TH E .11 U S E g DO YOU KNOW THAT- -Malvern's outstanding Flying Wing of all time was one Gordon ltlinkl Duke 11911-191-ll. Gord was one of Canada's first airmen and was killed while flying in England '? -In the early days our rugby squads boasted of such stars as Howie Orr, Cecil Annis. Sandy Pearce, Morris Hughes, Dick Kidd. Mac Muirhead lyes, a brotherl, Frank Commins, Eric Lickley. and How Hamlin 'F These compare with the best of the pre- sent crop. -Malvern won the Junior High School title for the first time in 1923. with only four substitutes, and defeated Oakwood to the tune of 19-11? -Malvern repeated in the Junior in 1924? -This 1924 team has been rated as the best junior team to date '? It included such stars as Yip Foster llater with Balmy Beach and Boston Bruinsl, Red Moore tof Balmy Beach and M.A.A.A. farnel, Claude Harris lof Balmy Beach, now starring with Marlborosl , lDr.l Johnny Stewart tlater outstanding flying wing with Varsityl, Freddie Rose and Hatton Taylor, to mention just a few. -This team scored 152 points in four games: was never scored against and won the final 25-0? -This team defeated Varsity III team lJunior Intercollegiatel by the score of 8-O in a half-hour game on Varsity campus and won going away '? -Malvern Rowing Club was organized in 1922 and had as its first Henley crew Hilbert Mason fstixl, Tom Ivens 135, Johnny Stewart 121, Harold Kirke fbowl '? -Malvern oarsmen have won five Dominion High School Champ- ionships in the fours and two in the eigbts. They have won seven Dominion Day Regatta titles and have raced a dead heat? -Malvern has defeated on the water Upper Canada College, Hamilton Collegiate, Hamilton Tech., St. Catharines C. I., Ottawa Glebe C. I., Brockville C. I., Parkdale C. I., Buffalo H. S. and Lafayette lBuffaloJ H.S.'? Malvern has not lost a race since 1922. -The boats used cost 25550.00 and the money was raised through the efforts of the Malvern Merry Minstrels? -We won our only hockey title in 1924, defeating Humberside 1-0? -Jack Guest, winner of the Diamond Sculls, is Hon. President of the Rowing Club ? -Seven members of the Balmy Beach Rugby Team, Dominion Champions for 1930, were ex-Malvern players? -Malvern gymnasium teams were for years among the best in the province, and fstrange to sayl were first organized in 1915 by Mr. I.. II. Clarke? ' -A. W. B. lsixj THE MUSE 'F s 1-,LT tai: 'Nt ATX T' 4 ' sn A is A -5 'Q at Ar A s ' h 9 A xfk as Honorary President ...... ............. . lack Guest President .................... ..... X Villiam Stewart Vice-President ............. ................ .... J o hn Pond Secretary-Treasurer ..... ...... D onald Walkinshaw Coach .,.......................... ................. 3 lr. Blakeley N SPITE of the fact that rowing is, with regard to the school term, a post-seasonal sport, the machines in the armouries work at fever pitch all through the year. For spring training the crews go to the Argo- naut Rowing Club, where their racing boats ere kept and where conditions are favour- able for training on the water. The popular idea of rowing seems to be that a strong man steps into a boat, splashes his oar into the water and pulls--the strong- est man winning the race. This is, of course. erroneous. While muscle is necessary. it is secondary in importance to good form. It is very possible, for instance. for the weakest contestant in a race to win. He may get ' more distance with each stroke and with less HILL STEWART 9X9l'tl0Y1- An analysis of one stroke will serve to illustrate the perfect co-ordination between mind and muscle necessary to good form. ill The knees and back are fully bent. arms outstretched. oar turned with the blade perpendicular to the water. 121 The back is straight- ened with knees still bent. 435 This position is held while knees straighten and the seat moves along the slide. I-lj The back moves backward. 451 The arms are bent. 461 The oar is turned to a hori- zontal position. Each movement is duplicated in reverse order to come forward: the less splash the better the stroke. In the beginner. each movement is separate. In the nrnwnurn, the nmrf'n1enz'.w sgnfcfzro- nite in fl snmoflz stroke. All through the year the teams work for form and condition for the two possible races, viz.. Dominion Day Regatta at Toronto and I '39 l THE MUSE Canadian Henley at St. Catharines. The crews are sent to St. Cath- arines for about a week. where they go through mild work-outs and then make use of the year's training. At this meet they mix with the cream of sportsmen. Malvern. more often than not, takes iirst place. It is a school habit. The boys work in the knowledge that, owing to the season, the glory of their win with the black- and red-tipped blades will fade before the next school term. Yet sufficient unto rowing is the sport thereof. -W. D. STEWART. Punk How-HALPI11 Pirris, llox XVALKINSHAVV, JACK MCEACHERN, BRUCE lllL'C1lRHIl.l.. Ton WEs1'1,,fxkE, A. BLAKI-:1,m'. F,-om Ii:-iw-gA. Fisum, W. Srnymnr, R. Mormon, A. W1ckENs, J. POND. E701 -..l - - deli?-119255. .... c , are CADETS AST Spring Inspection was held in the school grounds. Much preparation went for naught when we found at the last moment that, owing to heavy rains. Ulster Stadium could not be used. Despite this set-back, the Inspection went over very well and Col. McCrimmon reported us excellent on all matters. Our Colonel, Charlie Box, a rare admixture of leniency and firmness. handled everything to the King's taste, and the boys deserve real credit for the support they gave him. We were helped greatly during the year by Dr. Alex. Fisher in our First Aid work and by Sergt.-Major Young in our Physical Training and Officers' Class. This year we are turn- ing our eyes again towards Ulster Stadium. Jack Standing will be Colonel! He has given nve years of enthusiastic help. A good band is a very necessary feature of any cadet corps. Mal- vern has always been particularly well off in this department. But there certainly has never been a band lieutenant that has devoted the interest and energy that Charlie Galster has for two years. Ed. McClure. too. deserves real credit for organizing a really up-to-date First Aid Corps. Many officers will be leaving this year and their support has been so whole-hearted that they will be hard to replace. To repay the boys who unselfishly have given time and support in Cadet work an assault- at-arms will be organized in the Spring and put on next lVinter. Should this be well supported it will be made an annual affair. The Empire Day Parade this year will in all probability not include High Schools. Accordingly this work will be over early in May. -A. XV. B. l71l THE MUSE ,. ,gf- Q New ff? , ' , 'Time-eff tflilfiff , f' 5 jj - Ai Q wx- 4-,L - L Th ' Q ,iid If plus-S X f ff 4 i 1 V 1 X ,1 -' -gg ' . P, :ix Q -i :j iq- ,,, S U GIRLS ATHLE IIC.: Hon. Presidents ............ Miss McAlpine, Miss Nichol President ............... .............................. M adge Pr1ce Secretary ...... ....... G race Phillips Treasurer ........ .................... ....... P a t Aldington CRESTS As Champions of Toronto, the girls' senior basketball team for lflrilu-31 was presented this year with crests by the City and the Silver Trophy of the Toronto Intercollegiate Basketball Association. The winners also received school pins from the Girls'Athletic Society, and Ms were given to Misses McCrea, Kippen, Nixon, Kennedy and Clayton. The members of the team were Ruth Cunningham. Muriel Wcllar. .lean Cline. Thelma Parker, Hazel McCrae, Gladys Kippen. Grace Nixon. Elizabeth Kennedy. BADMINTON This is the first year that Badminton equipment has been bought. Part of the proceeds from the athletic masquerade were used by the Athletic Club to buy four racquets and a supply of shuttles. The girls have formed a Badminton Club and come before school to play in the gym. From now on Badminton will have a definite place in gym work. The girls enjoy it very much and Lorraine Pellett, ZA, as the curator, should be thanked for the tinc work she has done in super- vising: the Haulniinton beginners. l72l THE MUSE ggm I BASKETBALL In order to give more girls throughout the school the opportunity to play basketball, the old plan of a picked junior and senior team playing the other schools in its section of the city has been discon- tinued in order to try out a new system. Whether the old form of league games will be discontinued for the future depends on the success of the new plan this year. Now each form has its own team and a tinal winner is declared from the fifths, fourths, thirds, seconds and lirsts. This year the winning fourth and winning third teams played the corresponding winners of Riverdale Collegiate, resulting in a close victory for Malvern fourths and a defeat for Malvern thirds. Malvern's home game has not yet been played. The winners of the third, second and first forms a1'e playing home and home games with Danforth Technical. Ill the different sports exhibition games can be arranged with any of the other city schools when the basketball schedule has been finished. The line up for 4C-Nora Cotton tCaptainJ, Gladys Kippen. Edith Martin. Audrey Wilson. Rene McCrea, Eleanor Ketchen, May McDougall and Jean La Trobe. 3D line up-Jean Davis tCaptainJ, Bertha Portwood, Ruth Thomas, Helen Norman. Bernadotte Morin. Elsie Sale, Patience Rap- ley. Pat Aldington, Grace Phillips. Florence Passey. The winners of the second and first forms are not yet declared. Best luck to the new system. Let us hope all the girls have a good time at their games. Last year's winning basketball team of the first forms was 1H. The winners of the baseball were ID. Lett to rzghtehl. DAYIINQE, G. Save, D. fiUl'L'H1I.-KN, H. G. F.-XIRBAIRN, G. SMITH D. Baiuiv, 1. 53lI'l'lI. A. 5l,'ll.Xl'Fl-'llill Waptzilm. lwl THE MUSE Can you 'pass' in 'Appearanoe'? J? If X .-rf w.,.53' 5. E f ' ' f- wif ?p.f 'fi 1 2? N ' H 1 va . - 1 -fi-r'fft'E ?1 fa q iff ' ,fx xx is QS? Tip Top Clothes enable you to pass every test in appearance yet be very economical. Any Tip Top suit, top- coat or Tuxedo, tailored to your measure, costs only 3524-value you cannot equal anywhere else for many dollars more. Come in now and see the new Tip Top samples for Spring-tl1ey're just the ami every smart young fellow wants. V .'x?'- if Q Q xy K Q Y Z f : if 1 QQ Qi: FR i.,zf'. . ,. A' Q',3:'1- 5 Y A T X -fX .x r 5 . X X .M O ls ? Y X3 N li F KV E32 xr xv gf ea SUIT - TOPCOAT TUXEDO 3 2 4 T0 MEASURE TIP TOpIf LTD. THIS ISSTE UF THE MUSE was Prod ucvd by POOLE X MCCULLOUGH, Limited Commercial and Magazine PRINTERS L Sllffiill Allenlion Given lo School Your Books v 179 ,IUHN STREET TORONTO E21 'I 1 A THE' MUSE' 1. W . . D 4,1 S RIADGE Pmcfr Cups were donated by the Girls' Athletic Club for senior and junior championships. The winner of the senior cup was Madge Price. 5C. with 15 points, Hazel Godwin be- ing a close second with 13 points. Delcia Couchman. QD. was the winner of the junior with twenty-four points. Here's wishing the Girls' Athletic Club more success next year, and that means the co-operation of all the Malvern girls. GIRLS' FIELD SPORTS With the memory of 1930 iield sports well in mind. many of the girls began prac- tising with good spirit and high hopes early this year. The turnout on Field Day was very good. All the races provided plenty of excitement for the entrants and onlookers alike. DELCIA COUCHMAN TENNIS THE CANON BAYNES-REED TROPHY Ilizxiz Mc'f'm:vA The annual competition for this trophy got off to a good start with sixty entries this year. In spite of the drawback of bad weather, the games were played off in fair time. Rene McCrea, Reva Purdon, Ena Gall and Vera Bloodsworth won through the semi- finals. Rene McCrea and Ena Gall qualified to contest the final match. Rene McCrea won the first set 6-4, then Ena came to the fore taking the set 6-1. The final set came to an exciting finish with Rene winning 9-7. The entries for this year's competition were ex- cellent: here's hoping they will be as good next year. -MADGE PRICE. I T4 i T H E .11 U S E ppp BASEBALL TEAM Left to rightili LAx1oN'rA1oNE, L. Momox, E. MCL!-:on, J. SVVEETBIAN, G. O'M.xR.x, K. KNIGHT, Y. STIFI-'1.ER, L. PEL1.ETT, fabsentj M. OGDEN tffaptainb MALVERN COLLEGIATE ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION FINANCIAL REPORT June 30, 1931, to FQlJ1'll3l'j' 20, 1932 RECEIPTS EXPENDITURES galame. June 30' 1931 . ' 8203.71 Rugby Supplies ................ 3309.50 Gate Receilytsi I2-eferees--Rugby ..... .... 2 Malvern VS- Cent. Tec. 36 76 Supplies for Games .......... 3-1.511 Blalvern VS. Riverdale 46 30 IHSLIYHHCG ......................... 56.213 Malvern VS' Jawismm TT 83 Special Expense Fund .... 52.50 Malveyn VS. NITOFOMO 33,68 East Toronto Hospital .... 32.50 Malvern VS. Harbord Doctor Bills ....................... 54.00 and Er .............,........ 97.00 Awaffls ------'--' -'-- 4 9-90 Malvern vs. Parkdale.. 57 T0 Wlieafh ' ' 5-00 llI2ilY6I'I1 vs. Jarvis ...... 226 -10 Prmtmg 212 Athletic Fees .................... 238 05 Telephone ' fo Collection from Teams .... 8.25 Photographs 'I ' ' 81,0 Gen- ACU. ASW... Comm 32.50 Hockey Practice ........ .... 5 9.00 Interest on Bank Deposit 3.44 Hockey Expenses ............. 9.90 3 Balance Feb. 20, 1932 ...... 359.21 51,061.62 31,061.62 IT5l ' T Q W JI JZ 0 1. FAMQUS FIFTH - FOR FACTS NAME Ahms Ai rh:ARANcr: Wh:AkNh:ss C11-in-11 Aivmrrlon lIi,'riMA'rif: FNPE Mr. Clark Lorne Fr r-Lorne None? All right? .v 4 ? Infinhy H. Johnston gJohnnie Sweet Golfer' He didn't, did he? l 5' 10 Mi . 5' 10 S. Denby ' Sam Geo. Jessel Girls Boy! she's smart! To learn his Latin School teacher l . i FFF C 11 'th d thx- . T h f th h '- R. Burrows i Ronnie i Neat l n Syats Ou fvJay,eSiT.ge ls K Pass in French 0 6 OTJZSM e 01 B. Bowles N Bea Plump N Moustaches Oh Pete! English and History 150 lbs. E 4. X 4 , I-1 J. Mclilachcrn ' Johnnie Ha cha! Ha cha! Chemistry Parbleu! Linguist Court interpreter nj 4 ,A l M 1- 4 il! A A A 4444 4 A4 A AA 4444 MIM 4pA44AW E -H - at l l 11'tn'ktht'W 5' ' S. Shankman Selly Prehistoric i Science X con rigst, a H, Professor Einstein Bachelor Z M. P1-ice l Madge studihus Men y rm English S Lihiai-ian school mai-'m is B. McCorkell Bruce Lanky X Arguing I don't agree i Orator Sprinter H. Brennen Hughie Good-looking' 1 Hockey 3 I LovE you Big league catcher Caught her I. Phillips Irv. Frequent Big women Stop! Electrical engineer I Running the spotlight G. McDaniel Mac Reserved 1 Blondes Oh Pulee-ez ! None Fudge stirrer ' M. Spence Ma m Very pleasing Dark, curly hair E Bill said that- Mrs. Ab. Box Mrs. Duncan 5 ' D. Austen Doug 5 feet i Wrestling ' I see - Big' business man Graduatef?l I G. Watson Jose Benevolent Dot Bell i Now look here! Scholarship Soap box orator D. Thomas Doris Husky Bachelors i 74th question please? I Prima Donna Old maid -Jai TH If .ll I' S H I' 2-X RAN Some jokes may he funny And others slightly rude. Some are likely senseless And others Very crude, But to make us happy These jokes are quite the style. Please don't skip this set-tione You're guaranteed to smile. Pk if Alma Venables- Do you serye lohsters here '. Waiter- Certainly, we cater to everyone. :ge rj: 5: Deadey- Yes. it took me aliout six weeks to learn how to play rugby. Aunt- What haye you for your pains'. ' Deadey-''Linimentf' is 211 Mr. Day- ll'hen is Madam used and when is Dame used'. ' Botsford- Madam is used when speaking In a lady and Dame is used when speaking about a lady. ic 211 Ik Now then. Quartermain. said Mr. Taylor after a long eulogy on some tamous inyentors. what would you like to invent? lVell. Sir. replied Quartermain. I'd like to invent a machine so that by simply pressing a button all my homework would he done. Mr. Taylor frowned. Thats very lazy ot' you. he reprimanded. Now let Nourse tell us what he would like to inyent. Nourse yawned. Something to press the button. he said. P? 211 A well-known chemist says the best dissolution for gold is a boy and girl engaged. iT7l THE .IIFSE Do You Realize - - That this Edition of. THE KMUSEH was made possible only by the generosity of Our Advertisers. Loyal Malvernites will return the courtesy. -ADVERTISING STAFF. Stewart- My car is at the door. Rook- Yes, I hear it knocking. lk Bk lk HK All right on behind. there? called the conductor from the front of the C2112 Hold on, cried a shrill voice. Wait till I get my clothes on! The passengers craned their necks expectantly. Wolfenden was struggling to get a basket of laundry aboard. ak lk if if 'AI'lease. Mum, began the aged hero in appealing tones. as he stood at the kitchen door on wash day, I've lost my leg- Well. I ain't got it, snapped the woman, slamming the door. wk wk 152 Sk Helen Johnson to Dorie Learie- What is the difference between :ei sigh, an expensive automobile and a baboon ? Dorie- How should I know? Helen- An sigh is U Dear! the expensive car is too dear, and the lmlioon is you. dear. ITSI v ,IDL 251111 so 111 C ,C C P. SIMONE FANCY FRUITS AND VEGETABLES Prompt Service and Special Attention to Phone Orders. 1012 Kingston Road Phone H0ward 5151 FAVOURITE EXPRESSIONS OF MALVERN TEACHERS Nein, nein, nein! -Miss Smeaton. Next time I'll send a letter home. -Miss Cunningham. Now, is someone asking me for a detention down there 7 -Mr Horton. Now, it's all very easy if you put your mind to it. -Mr. Hisey. Are you really thinking or are you merely trying to remember?' -Miss Muirhead. All right ? -Mr. Clarke. Eh-eh-eh! What's going on down there? -Mr. MacQuarrie. I'm the referee and you're the players. and you must abide by the rules -Mr. Burke. Out with the dictionaries, boys! Out with the dictionaries! - Mr. MacNaughton. Any absentees? -Mr. Taylor. All right. I'll take five marks off your term marks. -Mr. Kerr. Write out all you know about the Red River Settlements. - Mr. Blakeley. Sapristi I -Mr. Crozier. Do you want to get thrown out on your ear 7 -Mr. Philp. This is only public school work. -Mr. Brown. Stop talking! -Miss MacAlpine. GRover 6033 I 982 Kingston Rd. We Deliver 2-1-Hour Service ERLE M c G U I N N E S S FLORIST We specialize in Funeral Designs Wedding and Graduation Bouquets KEnwood 1118 St. Clair and Dufferin Nights and Sundays, HOward 3839 E791 THE JI It S E HARRIS COAL CO.. LIMITED 314 COXWELL AYENLE COAL AND COKE Gladstone 1174 PATTISON'S STATIONERYAAND GIFT SHOP 2168 Queen St. East tCor. McLean! LENDING LIBRARY Stationery, Gifts, Cards, School and Picnic Supplies. Toys and Magazines. Satisfaction Guaranteed PIIUNE IIUXYXRD 25118 Dr. Herbert E. Watson DENTIST . . nu.. . Q.. 176 MAIN STRI-IEII Phone GRover 4154 Br. E. E. IH. Gannrr DENTIST 143 MAIN STREET Snell Block Phone Grover 9871 vxsrr , 7 MAC S L I L LY S C0nfeCfl0nC y HOME MADE CANDIES for ICE 55159-M CANDY KITCHENS I-IUMEMADIC CANDY Phone Howard 0232 20218 QUEEN STREET 184 Main St. at Gerrard C'UMPLlMEN'l'S R. W. Hoffman D.D.S. 2064 QUEEN ST. li. DR. V. C. LONG DENTIST 194621 Gerrard St. E. Cor. Woodbine Ave. Phone Grover 5260 X --i,. aa at BTILLTLUSCE or B leases A.EHNHJNE CHOICE FRUITS AND GROCERIES 2062 Queen St. East Phone HOward 0483 CO0KE'S TOURS One fine Day in the month of Aprile, May, or June, a bald father and his Balderston were Standing on the corner without their Maw. when an Austen with the Hood down came along. They heard a Bell ringing and they were very Egar to get there, so they put on full Powers and drove o'er More and Fenn. They saw Birds, such as Curlews and Herons Hying around. They heard a Russell and saw a Hare in its Burrows. They even drove through a Pond. running over some Fishers. They thought they were going to Sinkin. lfpon arriving. they fwent into a Baker's shop where the Cooke was taking Bowles of Rice out of the Ovens and packing them in Cartans. Prior to this, they had wished to buy an ice Cream Cohen. but the Price being more than a Penney. they thought it was too much ex-Spence. They heard a Chanter singing a Carroll, but he had been to De-war and was rather Learie. He kept saying. Am I a Holman Oram I a mere Shunk of meat? They gave him a Toye Ball and left him in Bot's-ford. For appointment Howard 8187 ELITE HAIRDRESSING AND BEAUTY PARLOCR 2106 Queen St. East - Toronto We specialize in all methods of Permanent Waving lS1l THE JIUSE George M. Bosnell Optometrist 2143 DANFORTH AVE. Toronto Phone Grover 7078 Branch Utlice PURT HOPE. UNT. Anderson's Tobacco and Stationery Lending Library Ice Cream Soft Drinks 363 Kingston Road Ho. 0073 1?f Q Q Sql ff! fy S 9 if gfgf ggi? 2f2?,g:2?fc1f3 fifffl ffQ:9fJ9g 9 4 9' 9 4 1 1 ff Nl ? iw n la. be 2, ' Ulf f,Q:.....,fX 5 5? , , ..., ll iii. I T-NX ff-X ff Tilt X 1 xt 1 Two LOVING GFNRTS! First Class Sanitary BARBER SHOP We Specialize in Ladies' Gents' and Childrens Hair Cutting 0. E. DINGMAN ZS!! SVARBOR0 ROAD C'o1'. Kingston lioafl Dressmaking Ladies' Dresses and Coats Made-to-Measure Misses' Dresses Reasonable MISS F LEMIN G 22l7 DANI 0R'l'H AVE. Grover 4217 lfill THE .IIUSE SILVERWOOD'S Serve Us VVELSH AND AMERICAN P ANTHRACITE CANADIAN MADE COKE C PGCAHONTAS HIGH GRADE FUEL OII The Finest Heat Money Can Buy l.akeSimcoe Y 'Ai S, ICESFU L M' A dale ezlmlrggwide service I33I THE MUSE TROPHY- CRAFT IJc'.s1'g111 flzfr l .lllllllll fff' IWC School Pins Pennants School Notepaper Class Pins Silk Embroidered School Christmas Cards Prize Ribbons and Felt Crests Medals and Trophies For the lvulling Sm-liouls :xml Cnllvgvs tlmnuglmut Cxlmuln. Dt-signs :mtl listirunitf-s gladly furnislmel on re-qui-st. Write for Chitnlitgllv TROPHY-CRAFT LIMITED 2525 Yonge St. - Toronto Compliments of BRANDON BREAD CO. 3.4 1. L Y A NX 1:1f1f.4 D 99 COLEMAN AVE. Gm' 4357 Res. Gro. 2707 COMPTON Book and Gift Shop The Recommended House for Authorized Text Books and All School Supplies 1Wholesale and Reiaill Examination Papers, Reprints and Answers, School and Class Pins, Crests and Pennants made to order, Manufacturers of School Christmas Cards, also Hand Colouring Cards for Art Pupils. Nmller Nm1.wh1'11c on fl'Cl'jj l7l'L'l'I-SUPII milf Rus! Cmfl flrrrlnzy f':ml.Q, LENDING LIBRARY Phone HOward 0169 860 KINGSTON RD, E31 g THE MUSE IL. , hill ,Lf I' I I 1 f IT gi l l I. . iq lllljl fgf I I ll' .aw lffefrgtilatyi I le nt ' Q I civil . ,':-.ggg-1:13, l 2 , 1- ' I Tl , le ' . 0 1-.X YT ' - Illia: '1-1+ 4 5 J , ' idly . Q 1 A I sa -fiflfrl-' If i'll5f'f if ell? ' It it we '19 I lll li I li, V Ile ' ig. Jn. ' A' AQ 'f. --S 'Hifi tif' V f' Q a ug f s xi fel ,Sf on I I - f Q 'wh jg: ' ldtlfb' Z gg lj' rllll Il l 1 a s - l lllll V' , I, I Cl-IARLE S II ' received ihe first Pirzeapplecgrown in England I-IARLES II of England was very fond of Pineapples and quantities of them were brought for his table from the Barbados Islands in the West Indies. He persuaded the Royal Gardener to grow the fruit in England and this was attempted. The presentation of the first Pineapple grown in England to the Stuart Monarch was made a great event. To-day Neilson's also insist on Pineapples good enough for a king for use in the centres of certain of their chocolates. The pick of the nut crops in Spain. the most luscious raisins from Australia, oranges and lemons from Sicily and other sunny lands. cherries from Italy, the flnest cane sugar. whatever it is, only the best is brought to Neilsons. Neilson's now have special arrangements with every Dealer u-hereby Neilson's Chocolates will be sold only while fresh, and therefore at their best. Neilson's new low prices-60C per lb. for former 51.00 Chocolates. and 50C per lb. for former 60C Chocolates makes it an economy as well as a delight to buy them. 'fn 14 5 Q Q VX ,Z7.,.-523.1 'lq! !fs' ,Mwlsans H Filulff NUTIPCREAMI ggi, 4y-?,.,-goQ:'1. viii: mlsnna CHOCOLATES 'S U X if ARE ALWAYS FRESH ff :1,L,:5 f f ,QF f Q. A. 1' 5 4 f . 4-:ca - , Q V ,P .L 4-' LHLFQ 3 'ff wlidxi : 5 glib' X' i 'E' '-'R' 1 ' l V . -' 6 . ,li 'f , I , .I .- , V 7, H - ' r ' '. x 1 - ' ' 'Tl ' 4' ,iv . .......f. sg: - Wim- .gm .,, .1 -v .- ns,-,f ff- V .F ' . .-.vw-Q.,-'--.-I fa .. fine 1 .iz .- -flau- - I I IR4 Tllhi JIl'SI? QE? I , 17 E351 G. W. CLOSE HOSIERY THE JIUSE For Quality. Service. High Class Groceries and Meats Milburn Si Myers Leader Stores 438 KINGSTON RD. Ho. 3666 Ho. 3471 Lennox 81 Co. Exclusive Men's and Boys' Wear nt Reasonable Prices Agent for Regent Tailors Clothing s:4.oo Only 824.00 1036 KINGSTON ROAD Howard 6751 OH! THOSE LATIN STUDENTS Hmc in Gullianz, inzportznrz csf. Hike into Gaul. it is important. Cursor sic dicuf umlf' cm' fzgressi Iictum. Caesar sicked the cat on the cur: I guess he licked 'em. Xofu 111410. Not a bean. IJIINNIIN sum jam. Pass us some jam. Pk if ' Pk Sample of an indirect request: Dad, I haven't any money. Bird- What's the difference between a Cat and a comma? Weatherburn- One has its claws at the end of its paws. the other has its pause at the end of its clause. 2? if FF :lf Quoth Miss Knight as she called the N. 11 roll: Don't answer unless you're here. Molly Hraniiit- How was iron found? John Gray- My father said they smelt it. Confectionery, Ice Cream and Tobaccos Phone Ho. 0180 12640 DANFORTH AVE. WIC lil-lLlVl'Ill Party Prizes etc., etc. McKinnon's MAIN ST. GIFT SHOP 154 Main St. so 1 . L just T H EM ,utr S5 H. FLANAGAN GROCERIES, ICE CREAM AND CONFECTIONERY 365 KINGSTON ROAD Ho. 1959 Phone Your Orders- YVe Deliver Blake Fletcher' BARBER SHOP AND I-IAIRDRESSING PARLOR FOR LADIES 2187 Queen St. E. S Nancy Silcox: Why do they say 'amen' instead 0 'awomeno' Al lVilcox: I dunno, why? Nancy: Because they sing 'hymns' not 'hers.' if DIC if Ik The Fifth Formers have no time for P.T. this year, but they don't mind-they get lots of exercise running up and down the loga rithms. E ,F u an tl as if Life's a hard grind, said the emery wheel. It's a perfect bore, said the auger. It means nothing but hard knocks for me, said the nail. You have not as much to go through as I have, said the sa Let's go on strike, said the hammer. Cut it out, cried the chisel. here comes the boss. And awl were silent. Ulf Bk SK flf Westlake tseeing McEachern. who had been fishingb- I see you risked your life saving your little brother from drowning. McEachern- That wasn't my brother. Westlake- Some relation ? McEachern- No, he had my bait in his pocket. PF wk bk 2? The school as a whole would like to see Mr. Horton doing the Cantor quack. R.W. Shepherd, Phm.B. Malvern Students DISPENSING CHEMIST We make a specialty of the Dispensing of Physicians' Prescriptions Buy your Sodas, Ice Cream, Hot Dogs and Coffee at 2122 Queen St e'?t East Bell's Confectionery at Hammersmith WE DELIVER - 921 KINGSTON ROAD THE MUSE E, Ambury CUMPLIMENTS for Siitxzrjs.. 'tabs ACME FARMERS '3 iIfz1Xl EffQIiiiTl '5 DAIRY LEXDING LIBRARY ' LINIITED HO. 009-1 2472 DANFORTH AVE. Midway 3541 Walter Davison- Say, Arthur, if you found ten bucks in your pocket. what would you think? Art. Howarth- I'd think I had somebody else's pants on. Ik Sic :li Mr. Lehmann thearing loud noises on the 3rd Hoorl- What are you doing up there, Dawkes'? Dawkes tafter falling down three more stepsl- Coming down, Sir. if PF 222 if Confidence in your fellow-man: Hold a nail for a cross-eyed man to hammer. Brennen fat circusl-- Why has a giraffe such a long neck? Hare 1absent-mindedlyl-- Probably because its head is so far from its body. Sr if 211 wk Native lto Mr. Hortonl- Well, what do you think of our town ? Mr. Horton ltouring the countryl- I think it is unique. Native- What do you mean by that '?' Mr. Horton- Unique is a word formed from Latin, 'Unus, meaning 'one.' and 'equusf meaning horsef v McGAVIN'S W. J. COUSINS mniss and CHILIJREIVS GROCER wmn Hush-ry Lingerie You RING WE BRING GI DSSARIJ FUITN IlA'l'll JN GARMENTS 1809 GERRARD ST. 22302 QUEEN ST. E. Y . I W1 Phone' Ho. 2096 Glove! 9k J Idol THE Phone Gliover 7163 Better Men's Wear BERT BUSTIN Hats and Haberdashery 1980 DANFORTH AVE. TORONTO R O M O NA BEAUTY SALON PERM.-KN ENT NVAVING SPECIALISTS 1041 KINGSTON ROAD HO. 2758 .ll FSE f ly, i Eu f'l'Cwu HOWARD'S MEN's WEAR OF COURSE YOU XVANT THE BEST CLEANERS and DYERS 2068 Queen St. East at Hambly Office Cor. Kingston Rd. and Bingham PHONE HOVVARD 1862 Dr. Herbert Farrell DEN TI S T Hours: 9 - 5. Open Evenings T. B A 1 N SCHOOL SUPPLIES Science Loose Leaf Books High School Work Books Exercise and Scribbling Books Mathematical Sets Dividers and Set Squares Pastels, Crayons Water Colors Pens. Pencils. Erasers and Inks 1933 QUEEN ST. EAST S9 is THE Ml SE Dr. W. Glenn Davis DENTIST 2 Elmer Ave. Toronto Cor. Queen E. HU. 4768 LATIMER'S Men's and Boys' Wear 2112 DANFORTH AVE. Woodbine Block Harold Smith, Phm.B. Prescription Druggist See Hur New Lending Library 1976 Queen St. East Phone Howard S798 Principal Cleaners 2217 DANFORTH AVE. Grover 4217 Men's Suits and Top Coats Cleaned and Pressed 31.00 PERSUNAL ATTENTION We Close 7 p.m. Every Day D. R. Farquhar, Valet Service Barbara Roberts Z5 Pianist and Teacher Studio: 33 Hambly Ave. CLAYTO NS for QUALITY MEATS AND SERVICE Howard 9396 Your Pat ronage Appreciated Lanluns Shoppe High Class S'l'.XTlUNERY, TUBACCU C1 lNl EC'1'l0NERY MAG.XZlNES ANI? lflfl FREAM Ho. 0076 128-1330 Main St. SOLOMON'S Book and Card Shop 2056 Queen St. East Ll-ENDING LIBRARY Cards For All Uccasions 90 1 . THE MUSE' AND THEY CALL THIS A FREE COUNTRY!!!!! No smoking. Beware of the dog. Trespassers will be prosecuted. Fire trucks and ambulances have the right-of-way. Pedestrians cross with green light. No parking between signs. Stop. Through street. School. Drive slowly. Stop! Look! Listen! Railroad crossing. No left turn. Keep off the grass. Slowly-soft shoulders. No swimming allowed. Quiet. Hospital zone. Keep to the right. Do not cut in. No passing on hills. Residential district-no heavy-duty trucks allowed. No parking after 4,00 P.M. Slowly. men at work. PF H14 114 PK THE MUSE MOVIE REVIEW Common Law .................................................... Bring Your Note The Champ ............,... ....... .................... S t anding Blonde Baby ....,....................... ........ J unc Cobbledick Monkey Business ..,.................... ........... I ll the Study A Great American Tragedy ..... ........... C ramnzond Fifty Fathoms Deep .............. ............. E vans Sunny Side Up ................... ......... B rennan Hell's Angels ........,................. ....................... 5 A Lonely Troubador ...................... .................... J ack Cooke The Man Who Came Back ........ ........................... D oug. A. Beau Hunks ........,................... ........ H illier and Standing Caught Short ................. .................. R uss. Grant Once a Lady ..................... ....... M iss M uirhead Hell Bent for 'Frisco ..... ........... . Madge P'rice Divorcee ......................... ....... H den Johizson HF ik Pk lk It pays to have presence of mind: When Caesar saw that he could not escape from a steam-roller, which had knocked him down. he turned on his side so that his trousers would be pressed for the funeral. lk Sk lk IF There was a young sculptor named Phidias, Whose statues were perfectly hideousg He carved Aphrodite YVithout any nightie, Which shocked the ultra-fastidious. E911 4TliE, -V U 5 E ,Em Alliugraplpa .Q
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