Huntington North High School - Modulus Yearbook (Huntington, IN)

 - Class of 1933

Page 12 of 110

 

Huntington North High School - Modulus Yearbook (Huntington, IN) online collection, 1933 Edition, Page 12 of 110
Page 12 of 110



Huntington North High School - Modulus Yearbook (Huntington, IN) online collection, 1933 Edition, Page 11
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Huntington North High School - Modulus Yearbook (Huntington, IN) online collection, 1933 Edition, Page 13
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Page 12 text:

J. L. Brenn Jcmes Kiser •J. L. Brenn., the president of the school board, says that hia hobby is traveling. As his youth i7as spent in the old country, and, as his business and pj.earure trip have taken hin, all ever the United States, Llr. Brann has seea r.uc: oJ the world. EveTy F-U ' iTier. h.-,ro e: ' , he and his fcinLly st :.rt our for ports afdr» Last sutrsier th-;y ■•-ent as far rest as Great Salt Lake. iinother ho ' bby of l.Ir. Erenn ' s is reading, Ke has p. liorary which, according to his daughter, is overflowing into the attic If you see books coning out of the chimney don ' t be surprised ' , John V. Sees On state road 24, six miles north of Andrews, there is a farm belonging to John V. Sees , of our school board, rrhich he says he is going to turn into a horae for old and decrepid lavri ers. Ilr. Sees purchased the farm a nunber of years ago. It is of good size, specializing in raising chickens and co 7s. i-ir. Sees ' hobby is farming, cLnd when his ship rolls in, he rants to go to his farm and enjoy himself. There ' s no la?. ' against it, is there? Vfinfield Sutton mother fishemani Winfield Sutton is an enthusiast of the deep. There is nothing that gives him as great pleasure as sitting in a smelly tou boat, sticking squashy worms on a fish-hook.- T. H. Mahan, the coimty superintendent of schools, and a fellow fisherman, says that :.ir. Sutton has more en- durance than anyone he ever knev;. Sutton spent tT7o days at Palmer Lake over last Labor Doy, and the total catch v;as not big enough to keepl Sutton is a meijber of the school board. -7hen the first high school building v as built, James Kiser, our head custodian , v;as there to help folks out of difficult situa- tions:. Since then, the old building has been torn doun, a nev; one built, and a depression set in, but Jim is still helping folks out of situations. Jim lives in a comfortable room just off the stage. His hobby is his car. Ttro years ago, at a dinner celebrating Jim ' s fortieth year of service, the teachers pre- sented him trith a water heater for his car. So last year he bought himself a good-looking Buick to go with it. ne has tcien several trips out of the state from time to time, but his most interesting trip vras the one where he made a quick turn, knocking over a rov; of mail- boies. Liiss Eredith Langley Left, alone in Miss Fredith Langley ' s office, we threw hasty glances here .nd there , our eyes at last resting on c.n r.rticle of great worth laying on the table. It was a water color picture of a bouquet of spring flov ers. Looking closer .ve BGW in the corner the ncme, Fredith L; -nglay . The secret was out I Ivlr. Bj ' -ers ' secretary is a sure ' nuff artist. The water color bouquet crji be found in I ' -.st yer.r ' s Simshine scrapbook Tho collection you see beside her in tho cut ■..-ere made while she was in High School, One of them is in oil, three in water color, and two in pastel. Miss Lrnglcy has recently col- lected all hor old paintings cjid has frrjnod thcmi She Iso collects pictures by old and new artists -.-. ' hich she hopos to copy if you kids stop bjing l tc and give hor half a chance. 4

Page 11 text:

Hobby Hiders Tli» hobby horse doth hither prance, liaid Uarrlan and the Uopris dance, 3 HE ORIGINAL hobby-horse v as a rustic affair giving the ap- pearance of a man on horseback but it really was the reverse. The man ceirried the horse around, eanopy hiding the fact that the horse was not doing its own walk- ing. This hobby-horse was part of a game, the Morris dance, played in England in the days of Edward III» Because the players got so much joy from their game, and be- cause a hobby is something you step into, carry around where-ever you go, and do your own pedaling for, we have decided to call our facul- ty hobby riders, J, M, Scudder In that glorious quiet of a sunmer evening, as the birds noisi- ly make way for the night, if you happened to be passing, you would see J, M. Scudder, our superintend- ent, seeing how his hobby had fared for the day, Mr, Scudder ' s hobby is his dahlia bed located behind his home. Four years ago , as he was going through the Seattle dahlia gardens, he received an inspiration to start one of his own. And he did. Today his garden contains forty-two var- ieties! He enjoys raising these flovrers more than others because it is more difficult. Next fail when you pass a bou- quet of dahlias on the table by the bulletin board, you will know that they were cared for. by the man who has helped our schools to grow and blossom during these past twenty- two years — — M r, Scudder, C, E, Byers No one says, Tooh, pooh, when C, E. Byers tells them a fish story. And it s not because he is our principal eitherl It is be- cause the story is tarue. Did you know that the maga - zine. Outdoor Life, has a Where To Go department in which certain individuals answer questions about sports of which they are an author- ity? Ovir principal is one of those folks, emswering from fifteen to twenty letters some months on hunt- ing and fishing in northern Michi- gan, To do this he has to know in what lakes trout axe found, where the best deer hunting is, how these places can be reached, and other matters of as much detail. Another phase of outdoor 3JLfe in which he is interested is gar- dening. At both his town house and summer cottage he has pools, rustic furniture, and attractive flower plots. From time to time Mr. Byers comes home with a new, carefully chosen book under his arm. He is building up a libreiry of his own. Already he has 4,000 bolumes and, we might add, he buys his books to read and not for the coloo; ' of the binding.



Page 13 text:

L ' liss Hazel Bechtold From Rags to Rugs uill be the title of the book liiss Lletta Leedy will write if she decides to unravel a yarn about her hobby. It may surprise you to know that Liiss Leedy, Mr. Scudders ' s sec- re tai y, and the very personifica- tion of business system and neat- ness, spends her spare time cro- cheting rugs out of rags, old hose and jute. You really should not smile, because her rugs are unusually col- orful and neat. Using v;hatever spare time she has , it takes her a- bout t¥ro v eeks to complete a rug. And where were you the morn- ing of ' November 14? Mrs, Hazel Bechtold, the at- tendance officer, calls your bluff if you have one and is sorry for you if you do not. After any of us are out for a young age, I. s« Bechtold, plus Mrs, Sayles jump out of a car and pounce on the front door bell. Instead of being scared, you 7;ill probably think it v. ' orth the bother to hear Mrs, Bechtold ' s funny little chuckle. Her hobby is riding around in her car, taking trips, swimming, and the like.

Suggestions in the Huntington North High School - Modulus Yearbook (Huntington, IN) collection:

Huntington North High School - Modulus Yearbook (Huntington, IN) online collection, 1930 Edition, Page 1

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Huntington North High School - Modulus Yearbook (Huntington, IN) online collection, 1931 Edition, Page 1

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Huntington North High School - Modulus Yearbook (Huntington, IN) online collection, 1932 Edition, Page 1

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Huntington North High School - Modulus Yearbook (Huntington, IN) online collection, 1934 Edition, Page 1

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Huntington North High School - Modulus Yearbook (Huntington, IN) online collection, 1936 Edition, Page 1

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Huntington North High School - Modulus Yearbook (Huntington, IN) online collection, 1937 Edition, Page 1

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