R«checka| Nece*nary To Ocfcide. WhO Winner*Oita**dONDAY^ CLUB, WINS FIRST■ *• '* , ; •* i s * • hifteen Individuals' Scored 99.5 I ^Per Cent, Only Tyro Have. 'V ~ a JPerf ect jRecbrd.Xfter cheeking; dud reeheeking the iO!'e;^han-’‘li)0 papers turned [a in-the Iusid-: Memory Coldest fcbe.^ judges nnounced the tplfowing ;‘ Tiie pxnard-Monday.: .ClutfW^ih?Im rAmhotffinn v ite • womei^s^b^Wd’yt^e . Cpimnunitiy • Chorus.be announced later.Pf^Hjtoning team was composed oC Wi. $ ~ Roussey, Mrs. Richard Sto*^r, .Mrs. James Krouser and Mrs. larles H. Weaver.The adult individual contest was on by number 84 and number 21. ich of whom turned in a 100 per cent jrfect paper.The prize, Consisting of choice of monographs records will be divided,*ch one getting three. It is not ncnvn yet who holds the winning umbers.Seven boys and girls scored lfl0p'er ant as follows: Npjub'efiT 103; 105; i; 46; J$5sx74V 110. Each of these 111 receive a $2.50 savings account n local banks.Fifteen individuals scored 90.5 per ant and a phonograph record will be warded to all. These were numbers:3 on team 1700; 107 on team 1300;1 on team 1200; 86 on team'1200; 38-n team 1000; 32 on team 600; 68 on■jam 600; 53 on team COO; 25 on team 06; 17 on team 305; 12 on team 303;nd 6 on team 301.Three individual contestants hold-rig- numbers from pink' blanks are .mong the 15: They are numbers:7; 20; arid 14- J , *•The High school contest in which vere entered six teams from St. Jos-.ph‘s Institute and the Oxnard Union liglt school resulted in a tie. Juniors Hid Seniors from the latter averaging 10.5 per cent. The two classes have leen asked to suggest a way for (lending which shall take the banner.in the Graxtimar school contest for he schools outside the Oxnard teams ,vero entered by Somis, Camarillo, fluencme, and Ocean View, Somis. entered two teams, team number one 3f which won the banner.In the local Grammar school contest three teams were entered from St. Joseph's Institute one from the Oxnard; Primary school and a number of1 teams from the Haydoek Grammar school. Two of these teams tied for first place, one ot them being team number two from the Grammar school of St. Joseph's Institute and the other the 8th grade from the Haydoek Grammar school. Each team mode a score of 9S per cent. The teachers ot the Haydoek Grammar school had intended to segragate the contestants from that grade into a number of smaller teams but there was -a failure to enter the contestants in teams ahead of time and a failure on the part of the contestants to have themselves segregated into teams when they went to the window to receive their scoring blanks. The results showed that if this segregation had been made, some of these teams would have had a higher average. But the judges with .the approval of the committee in charge thought it inadvisable to permit a segregation after the contestants from the Haydoek Grammar school have their scores averaged as a whole thus making the average a tie with, the average of the highest team frtfrh' St. Joseph’s Institute. A banner will- be given to each1* ’. • ‘ ' ' ie Junior class'team from the ml Union High'school which tied the Senior Class with a score ofper cent was made up of the- fol*ng : Frances' Forster, tvah Down-Helen Schodley,-and Elsa Bach-The Senior team was as follows: »1 Haydoek, Bernfce Blackstock May Bradshaw.he beautiful banner awarded to winners of the High4 school con-was awarded yesterday at a Bpec* assembly by Mrs. H, C. Downes Paul Lehmann. The other bait-a will be presented later. The