Selwyn House School - Yearbook (Montreal, Quebec Canada)

 - Class of 1933

Page 14 of 42

 

Selwyn House School - Yearbook (Montreal, Quebec Canada) online collection, 1933 Edition, Page 14 of 42
Page 14 of 42



Selwyn House School - Yearbook (Montreal, Quebec Canada) online collection, 1933 Edition, Page 13
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Selwyn House School - Yearbook (Montreal, Quebec Canada) online collection, 1933 Edition, Page 15
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Page 14 text:

SFLWYN HOUSE SCHOOL MAGAZINE CH,-XRAC'l'FRS Oli' THF SIXTH FORM, 193 l51l.1.v Hixusrox. He on the stage oft causes a furore: :X reg'lar Eddie Cantor-BarrymoreY l'E'rER P-X'I'CH. lYho is Jumbo F XYhat's the catch ? .-X worthy Scout is Peter Patch. XYILDER PENFIFLIJ W'xi.i,.Axc'E Goyvnsx S'rEi'HEN l..EAcock BEx'rox 'I ,-xcksox. XYl1.l.lAn1 Frau Mu Al.-XI.CUl.N Bvnus. - ,wr L i.,xL'uE l i2'rRAi' :Ji Jxckuz Locks. .Ions Kaur. SIDNEY l.viu AN. Now that the weather's so much milder, Ne'er late for School is our friend Wilder. In spite of the l,egislature's lsan, ls an ali-Norma-l movie fan I Perpetrator of a good many SHS. Literary l.apses. Steve l.eacock's home-work may he messy, Hut for a treat just read his lfssayl with his satchel ..... etc. A hockey stick although he lacks one, Bill Shakespeare's plays knows Benton jackson lYill Stewart's pardon we must crave If we refer to his close shave l His well-sleeked hair each lioy admires: Valentino F No! XVliy, Malcolm Byers! Claude, the lvrainwave, never liored With Latin grammar, sweeps the hoard. 'l'ell young .lack I.ocke a joke, and he ln ten years' time the joke will see l It is a fact no one would douht, Johnny Kemp's the ideal Scout l This wee chap, UID, our Lilliputian, ln Scouting matters is a Do-your-duty 'un ' Dkrmxioxo Blaks Of hats immense he is a great adorer: Have you seen his snappy, new fedora F I..uvRENcE lXlCl,0L'tJ.-Xl.I.. Dougie has a first Flite scheme, For managing the hockey team. . XI.l-ORED l,0I.I..Xl'lx. Good old Schnozzle l Good lsoys all, Valete l -Y-eliHl'fL' I l'G.1CE.N'. ...' Uwe I l1.vw1' 10 .ting ll .l'0l1g, Ifilh Il t'ht'r'lff1!l rl101'11.f.' LQ? Ill .Vrhool if iw-rr long, .fini iz!! Qf if before ur . Hn! noi: it if tl mufvfoz' grifji, The -hllHllII1l'J'lc'I'1l1 7't'1IIf71!1l.f mf, Tfml fffff' rl! .Yfflnnf fx iwlv brlicjf: .!f11.v.' if lim brlziml' mr. l I2 l

Page 13 text:

FOR THE SCHOOL YEAR 1932-1933 grep Bamn Dim ontlizzrf of f11ll1li,ffor1e1z' .vh11pv.v CVOIIZC' lm-ing from the f111ls1l .vlzraml qf Niglzfg Gzzmzl, gniv, 11.f IZ zvzra11lf1zre that gzzpftv, .ind .rlf11'e.f, lhey gate upon Ihr .QfI0.ffhY lighlg Bleak ,vIre1't.v in Ihr rlzill of lI107'7Zi71xQ',! hrmilz .fre like to 1IIOII,fft'I'.V in ll-frl'0ZKl1 dre111n.- Thix hifleons maflc of hilter Death .ind hillar Life 1li.frl0.ff1l hy DIlTL'I1,.f liI't'IZ7' gle11m. Crt-v whiff Qf fhe min are groping hy, ,ix 1'lr1111111,v hrezzlhs from I!7Ik1IOT.i'7I gmL'e.v flier riff, Hfhilf glczref llzrouglz Ihfil' mgx ll Illllfkj' 51111. They .trek fhrir liver and hnzling nought llzfy yigh. Blind .' Uxing lheir wzlfpy flllilffj 115 E.Vt'5 They feel for willzezwl f70zc 1'.f wlzezv lhfrr are 710716. March 1933. L. YY11.l.s HRNIJERSON. Ql93lf32,l To seize upon the restlessness, the venturesomeness, the budding intellectual powers, the warm generosities and loyalties which make the young adolescent so lovable, so in- teresting, yet such a problem, to harness these by a thousand ingenious devices to the service of that little community which is the school, to take the young, growing, changing body and by constant careful supervision in the school and in the playing Field, guide it along the direction it is to go if it is to attain to the perfectly balanced harmony of the adult bodyg to substitute principle for impulse, controlled emotion for instinct: to encourage and stimulate along the path of what the child can do -never to hold back by weakness, but ever to urge forward by his own particular strength - these are the real objectives of the school to-da y. A SKIING WIS WILL GO Down, down, down we go: Ezzry ringing, fare ffizzging, H lllizljfzzleey qfjfving Jl10'lC'. Down, !Zl0'lC'7l, d0'ii'71 fha hill: Kzzeef Jllflklilig, horlv guakizzg, Then Oh .' wha! Il ,rpillf Up, up, up, we get: lTh1zl dotwzhill 1'r11i.re l111,v lfff ll hrzfise ll Unrfrzce all .fmiley mm' wet. Climb, flimh, rlimh ours IIl07't,.' .Ykis Jlipping, poles' gripping: The .rport I jlltff adore .V . P. B.-XRO'l I', lform V. llll



Page 15 text:

FOR THF SCHOOI, YEAR 1932-1933 M Y HOUSE I lt had always been my dream to own a little thatched cottage in a lovely garden in Devon. l had my mind on a little place near Tiverton and one day it seemed that my dream would come true, as I had just received a letter to say I had been left a legacy by an aunt. I immediately purchased the ground and built an eight-roomed cottage with a thatched roof. A winding gravel road leads to the cottage and a little fiagged stone path runs right through the garden to a small brook which l dammed up to make a waterfall. Minnows play in the brook, and there are water-lilies in a pool farther up. The house has climbing roses and vines which help to bring out the beauty of the scene. An oak door leads into a large hall, with a fireplace, off which are a sitting-room and a dining-room. The sitting-room is panelled in oak with a huge stone fireplace. Two sofas and three easy chairs, together with book-cases and lamps, help to furnish this much- used room. .-X bay window overlooks the garden and, when the windows are open -- they generally are f-, the perfume of the roses floats into the room. The dining-room is much the same as the sitting-room. There is an oaken table, and eight chairs. A huge fireplace at one end is a most welcome feature in the winter time. :X china cupboard filled with fine china and a sideboard are the only other pieces of furniture in the room. There is a long window seat in front of the casement windows. The kitchen and domestic quarters are in the rear. Oak stairs lead to the three bedrooms with bathrooms and my study. A flower and kitchen gardens are in the making, and l hope to grow peaches and other fruits for my table. Meanwhile a hammock slung between two shady trees and a good book are among my chief delights. BTV, Hurcnisox, Form IV-.-X. 'THE Nlirsoxic .1.'i rR1Bt 1'Es: 1. Self reliance 2. Power of initiative 3. Fearlessness of responsibility -l. Fertility of resource. f.fI1'I7I7.I'!Z!l,U7'I17 Fi.vlze1'. J THF FATHIQRS' MATCH, 1933 This match, which now seems to have become an annual institution, was played on the School Rink on January 25th, and was an unqualified success, the final score being ten goals to ten. The game was described in the Gazette of the following day. The reporter was kind enough to say that, for the School, all played well, and the boys deserved the rounds of applause which they received from the large number of parent-spectators who witnessed the match. He went on to say that the fathers proved to be a source of anxiety to the mothers, who were their only supporters, as it locked at times as if it would be necessary to call for stretchers, owing to the fathers' lack of condition l This was not quite accurate, however, as we frequently observed from the glllery that the mothers cheered the boys, while the sisters were mostly Father fans , which is as it should be l I 131

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Selwyn House School - Yearbook (Montreal, Quebec Canada) online collection, 1931 Edition, Page 1

1931

Selwyn House School - Yearbook (Montreal, Quebec Canada) online collection, 1932 Edition, Page 1

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Selwyn House School - Yearbook (Montreal, Quebec Canada) online collection, 1934 Edition, Page 1

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Selwyn House School - Yearbook (Montreal, Quebec Canada) online collection, 1935 Edition, Page 1

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Selwyn House School - Yearbook (Montreal, Quebec Canada) online collection, 1936 Edition, Page 1

1936

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