Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 June 1950 — Page 15
Ze J 18% to by buying JANTITY
3 to 8 5s weekly AD. Shop month.
reeze ends tiresome are entire work or
ii
A.
ELS
a time, Women remained metioniess 1 than Theater » snapped away-when-his attention turned elsewhere. nan onge xoag] eater, has an onstage-to-off
stage split of personality that|pe nal: re lr } . a ss : It didn’t pear slowly. °' : a Average age 19 or 20, with “Blithe Spirit" trio (left to right) are Margit Friedlander and Paul Laumann of Cincinnati and Dero. NS wmaypear slowly. handshakes. Men Fidgeted More [Tusat arm astoLy. | Mr, and Mrs. Heinz Pabst of Cin- P ght) . thy Oberlin of Culver. Ta So know, where a guy grabs your hand with both ~~ MEN ALSO moved in their seats more than| ,ClIta8¢ she's shyly surprised cinnati as chaperon-advisers.
: reeEIved BR BRAA a Mme. Arcati which is a master-| Germany, Mrs. Pabst, native|time for recreation. includin {real i tance, © : baker, Elkhart, smoke wanted. the were open- —hone: ’ i | , | , g real Importance, i t y EE Sal ind. All 1h ces wire pet aod a Bee] 3 Too4 workout, 14 ore Mike 0 piece of living caricature. |New Yorker, had a distinguished rowing in what they call their] Besides those I've mentioned,| “Blithe Spirit” will close Bun- | hot, stuffy day like Monday and I'm sure my my figures on the convention yal oud make!’ Being a »800d trouper, she theatrical’ career in England be- “navy,” a skiff that periodically the resident players include: Ar-day night, with “Ah, Wilderness" notebook would have had a few figures on dele- I think a hockev game in the ali is more | 0080’ Just steal the show. She! fore meeting and marrying her gets swamped by spanking waves dyth Lahrman,Seuthgate, Ky: scheduled for the July ¢ to § an gates and spectators passing out. fun to watch, : > : hous It together. An 4_so_theihusband. : : ————— iat the pinyhouse Hog k. . 1 Mary r Tances Rank, Cincinnati; Lwenk RRR es nl RB, ix Let Freedom Ring— ;
Put Up or Shut Up By Roker € Ruri mb hui
~ “business for ifself, with its first clearcut chance
Jt 1 y tn Ser in a pup-tent on maneuvers ; en ond the bos *=stop"it with-orders, what are they gothg to use for| ——tle-is between America and Russia, and here ’ with the 82d Airborne in Kentucky in
all-out aid, shori of war, by shipping guns and —
get together. nominate the or women for office without 8 which is hard on the ears.
Handshakes Every “2 Minutes
DON'T? THINK for a minute that my notebook was empty after the convention just because I bolied everything down to those two sentences. I : discovered, for instance, that a delegate will shake hands every two minutes on the convention floor | prior to the opening of the fireworks. 5 And a delegate will talk out of the side of his mouth to every .third person he recognizes and slaps on the back. The back slappers average four thumps on the shoulder. blades. Arm pinchers squeeze three times. ;
Of the 2096 delegates, most of which were men, . #traw hats covered three out of five heads and
the only times they were removed were during F. Paul Rutledge and D. Martin others in the cast get the best the playing of the Nationa! Anthem and the in- | : \Tahse of the University of Cin- Possible break: Margit Friedlandvocation, Nine out of 10, . , crossed legs and statistics |cinnati, gave a rousing perform. er and Ronald Colmanish Paul . The convention operied 45 minutes late and it ~ were plentiful at the Democratic convention. a wal] a deft satire) Lawpan; as Sub Wy ares took Chairman Ira Haymaker 10 minutes to pound : : y . Say raids 3 p= some attention out of the place. Women delegates sine 2 re a usted infrequently, Bven han These young people, who ‘live Edith, the maid; Herb Johnson
résponded to his request to be seated much quicker ve Ray Mag Sen. GATY. Waa SpE eying the Sephant and work in an odd-shaped build-|2nd- Viea Messham, as Dr. and” than did the men delegates. . : :
) Mrs. Bradman, and finally Mary iat ons bald-headed dsicgats wiped his high hair. 0, Tormerly a girls vasation ILA Fedor. ano fimallf Mary Next we come to the matter of waving one's line. The weather had a lot to do with letting hats was dragged lake i om | Blithe Spirit herself. hand. The delegate from a solid county like Greene, alone, of course. mr [the ——m mip ow cs from £ = we for example, will wave to someone every four Mr. Madden may be interested in kriowing that| as Saat Sh0re many| . MESSRS. RUTLEDGE and minutes. The average is slightly higher when he’s his harangue held the attention of three out of 10{ Fe ars 880, know how to create! rahse are running the ‘playhouse standing. A delegate who enjoys mingling| and persons in the Coliseum. This makes me wonder oa gi * Ditt.sigea lon a completely co-operative _wandering about the convention floor will wave if politicians aren't making a mistake when they clovact Y . Bi aie thea| PASS Having raised money by every 13 seconds. 4 rant and rave and swing their arms and strike a former hayloft which now subscription to purchase the large When you observe a politician like Secretary defiant poses, Be {seats 130, ‘the volunteer property on East Shore Dr, of State Charles Fleming, statistics pile up in a Personally, | don’t like anyone to shout of Me. can do things that “might sop they're hoping box-office receipts hurry: He toured the Coliseum a few times, smil- If a man has anything to say, let him say it with! professionals envious. {Will cover living expenses for the ing. slapping old buddies on the back and waved gs few histrionics as possible. Much’ easier on the $x -jeompany guring the 11-week seaAlmast Sonatant)y he 95 he Joove. N7itn Mis throat and the listener. : | I THINK NONE of them will! Nobody gets paid, except Mrs Mr. Fleming ceased stirring up the alr unless When the convention settied down and began object to my saying that Dorothy pauline Smith, the cook who 20meone yelled to sound like the midway of a. carnival with the Oberlin, of Culver, stole the Show | capably and economically turns * ., £1 speaker acting as the barker, legs began to cross.| Monday night in the role of Mme. out three meals a day for the 15 ae Congaesamni Andy Jacobs. loned. Shim ett Nine out of 10 persons had their legs crossed and) Areat), the medium. Misa Ober-| residents of the playhouse. Be- ( wi re the two directors Thera ars way. Hig sinfle would be +e coat mit alder ou main in that position for five minutes at lin, a graduate of the | [fae thie twe Seer thife ii
Maxinkuckee Playhouse Openir Enlivens Culver Vacation Spiri
Noel Coward's: ‘Blithe Spirit’ : ; First of 11 Performances Slated
By HENRY BUTLER, Times Staff Writer
CULVER, June 28—Last night's opening of the Maxinkuckee Playhouse brought an exciting new venture in live entertainment to this vacation éommunity, ; ; 4 First of 11 plays. which will run weekly through Sept. 10, the opener was Noel Coward's “Blithe Spirit,” Even in’ Monday's dress rehedrsal, the company of student
actors and actresses, directed hy =
men,
of his and doesn’t know when to let go. A quick : at the antics she's just done on-| Mr, Pabst, currently an Assist-| The resident students —taicei IN THIS “afniosphere, nicely, Ralph Hilt, Los Angeles, Cal analysis of a ow that i go A ck ars thin men Sdgeted Sine rate af twice stage. Onstage, laden with bau- ant tn “the “University of Cincin-|turns being stars, scene-painters, air-conditioned by Maxinkuckee/ an Indianapolis native and Tech -gladhands was extremely vigorous. ——— ~~ slight but, neverthiess an adjustment was wa {bles and trinkets, she gives al nati's German department, for- KP's, table-servers, electricians to a degree sweltering Indianap- graduate, incidentally; James One out of five men, T would say, puffed on One ont of APPrOXIn el eight ae, large - eyed, eloquent - handed, |terly operated the only inde- and general utility personnel. olis-ean only dream-of, the yourng- HoetTler, Clicinnatl: Burt Lane, cigars, Yesterday was a good day to make all the gum and their jaws worked" once a_second. Jaw- gry Cute-athletic version of pendent- Hve- theater in -Dresden, | Their busy schedule allows them sters are building something of Plaintield, N. J, and Tom Bru
again-is worthless, : ca !
The temper of the American people at the Continental Fortunes Either to prove itself a forceful body or a flimsy struc- W
g moment would display a great lack of interest ture of moonheam and lip service. If has come
to the old poker point of put up or shut up. na ov war mobilization, and the polities in Old or Black-Market Made
Washington, ;( being members of the expedient |
ngs Tough On ‘Little Man’ In E NEW YORK, June 28—The United Nations, U. 8, then it merely passes the buck, and so! ~~ = To =* W jy WN g . aR Se 5 a vast and sprawling ideal factory, is finally in Passes 128 uk :
In the Korean fighting the world peace-en- school, would scarcely jeopardize an election by| With Independence Day coming up mext_week, The Times be forcement “body has voted to tell the Northern handing a nasty pill to the voters. | gives its readers some sound reasons for celebrating. Koreans to knock off the battle and go home. If = There is only one possible clear winner in this.
The reasons come from an American’ newspaper correspondthe Koreans obey, then the United Nations has scramble. and that would be Russia, in the case ent who has rediscovered America after years in Europe and
won on bluff. If the Koreans thumb their noses that.the United Nations is wrecked through im-| the Middle Kast. at Trygve Lie & Co., then it is obvious the United potence, and the U. 8. refuses officially to inter-
This is the fourth .of six articles by Mr. Herald in which he “Nations must adopt forceful measures. vene with troops and pilots. Then the Red: compares the American way of life with that of Europe today. Koreans take over, as the Germans muscled into . : > Pr m— No Forceful Measures so’ much territory., The aggressors catch their Here the first duties of the day, BUT THEY DON'T have any forceful meas- Dreath, gad theh turn their attention to Japan| The lessons of the concrete ok ures. They have no international police force, and other juicy hunks of Asia. <= [ Wealth, order, travel, shelter, products, plenty, no roving goon squad of mercenary constables. I am no miliary expert, but I can still get] As of the building of some varied, vast, If armed force is thrown against the Koreans fOUr out of two-and-two, and this one adds up 4 a mi seal that 1a Dot ihe United Natioua. That is the 10 nothing hut a great big headache Jor Jom and CHAPTER FOUR U. 8. involved again in a test-case war. me. Even the 5 o'clock strategy club in 3 \ Wl) e's : : a Bucket of Brains recognizes the futility of the| - By GEORGE HERALD | If the U. S. is involved again in somebody rniteq Nations as a police force if they can't! '' THE BUTLER put our coats into the closet and said: : else’s triol war, it is asking for conflict with the stop a two-bit war in Korea. “Please
| 80 right into the living room, Si*. Mr. and Mrs. Curry. = : : s4 Are expecting you.” : And the-question forever nags: If they can t he last time I saw Mr—CUFFY Was
manipulators of that war, the Russian Communists. Then Korea is forgotten ond the basic bat-
| 1943, We had shared the tent, four blankets, two candies and between 150,000 to 200,000 If you hire a cop to protect® ou and the cop | mosquitoes. Today he is reported! eee
says: “Sorry. bud, but I lost my club-and—youto—have twice as many dollars exception, Merely among my ‘acwill have to look after yourself,” then the cop as we used to have mosquitoes . |quaintances, I found at least a Planes to the Koreans. Time has pretty well jg obviously useless. Nobody hires a weapon-| Mr. Curry got out of the Army|dozen ‘who had made good as ghown, especially in China, that technical aid is jess cop. -s {In 1946. While I was on my beat their own bosses since the end not worth very much unless the master techni- be
. Zi {in Europe, he got awfully busy|of the war. There must be sevclans go along to run. the guns and fly the planes. May Be Out of Business {
J jin New York City. With $1200/eral hundred thousand others. This again leads to dead Americans, and you . 80 IT SEEMS to me that the United Na- of his own and a
" : We. muscle? You and me? go again. —
We already are starting the same pattern of
: veteran's loan, | y=» __ - die just a8 dead in undeclared Wars a in Ao {ions, now in business, will almost inevitably be he started to produce. n soil IN MOST of Europe today, (By Courtesy of Yale University Art Gaueryl clared wars. out of business pretty soon. * Which the building trade found SUCh “Success stories” have be- :
- TTI LY ibe git The surrender of Lord Cornwallis at Yorktown, We are in the nasty position of winner-take- That is unless the smart Russian manipula- was indispensable. jcome virtually impossible. Yes, .. : di bv of ot vase ld Vv, 8 nothing in this mess. It the United Nations or- tors of the aggressor Koreans call off their dogs It sold like hot cakes. Within any people over there still make te Bove ment. That Faguirey Ne olary vac. Wetvetny ne Dusielfirt last Febtuaeyis ders a cease-fire and the fire continues, and the as a cynical gesture to kid the peace organiza- four years, Mr, Curry became a ® lot of money. In Ttaly and|four Ca Jo el ri- Serving them in their mutual re-| — United Nations does nothing about the disregard tion along a lit¥le more. For the sad truth is that moderately wealthy man with a SPain notably, I wag Invited by register : i ; reek ay on lations If we abandon that con. | *® Was setting a dinner table for. of order, then they can stick a “for rent” sign the United Nations as it stands is unequipped to small estate in Great Neck, four families living in a luxury all the ties. Another wt wee 8 Pag | cept our forebears could just as ® roving committes of Americans on those big new buildings on the Fast Side. If stop a cat fight if the cats decide to ignore the servants, two station wagons and More ostentatious as it elashed Now. ne as Fh APU Yor well haye stayed over there, |Among them was the director of J V i ef » : it fighting. a medium-si , with the misery around them. f 8t quola of “OW, =} ’ ld : : Hie Ree Nam a urR Sow has womnnd, 1 90 Bg fe | 2 flaca Fact, But their fortunas were a her ernment being sole distributor of, In Europe and in. America, you a huge national concern and the - . TTT TTT | THAT SOUNDS Ie most sue- Very-ald or had been. acquired by All grease materials. Five weeks can nage out 1 tase for a i amet. of 3 romparatively iad oat " . . : : 10st amount of government pla : e v cess stories you read in the news-|lilicit dealings ‘during and im- more were, ' ° “ " . We Was Took By Frederick C. Othman papers and magazines. “Bufld a mediately after the war, When Raymond finally started it 1s said that Planing ls un The Problems ar0ee 1} the Se : - . . Detter mousetrap, and the world You can find wealthy people in operating, be had to fill out 40% | most people prefer a weekly Pay-|ranked” the other ’ - 21 & " a ———————— resin. § | ; tt # . § J MEI) ) 3 * will b » France, Belgium, even G jens forms on every transac- " ra WASHINGTON, June 28 — That multimillion- the Justice Department is looking into the situa. aa jan to Jou doar A a ra Oe ee, any, he he Ore. He found himself Check to the ring of thelr own The awed Germans wanted to dollar scheme to build enimeled steel houses in tion, and the truck renters for reasons best we Lf Dor aot en on San © Boil a be ¢ his/ Wasting the best of his: time CASh register. Their rights must| seat the director of the big compastel shades ‘of yellow, pink, and lavender is to themselves are too busy to appear before the Rn hn) 2 ring details the man ’ ulld a business o I aiting in:anterooms. talking to Certainly be protected, but why pany ahead of the small business enough to make a taxpayer see red—with streaks investigating committee of Sen. J. William Ful- Dad to deal with on his way up, OWN, Is up against ever mounting :
should we discourage those man, but 5 U. 8. official explained of sulphur yellow. Fellow citizens, we was took. .bright (D. Ark.). the astute taleuiztions, the incred- obstacles. There are simply too Sovernment nou, Lan among us who still have ploneerito them: = I'm talking about that Lustron outfit in Colum- What seemed to pain the Senators was. the fact) lpm of plain drudgery many eager-beaver officials trying After #ixé months of that, he Plood in their veins? | “Director X. is an employee, Mr, bus, O., for which the Reconstruction Finance that Lustron was paying for trucks at the rate of a : goes Into such an achieve-/to make the world safe for closed his shop, sold his “bail! My friend on Long Island who|y. a self-made man. It is the Corp, put up $37.5 million of our money to build $235,000 a month—out. of that loan of our mil. men Kock Jor . |bureaucracy. and took a job in a chemical manufactured the Screw for American tradition to rate the ultrasmodern houses on a production line and ship !lons, réemember — without any thought as: to roughout my experiences’, Raymond P. a Paris friend of factory. builders told me: {owner of a firm, however small, ‘em out to your lot and mine on trailer-trucks. As Whether the machines were needed, or even whether President Truman told the mine, wanted to open a small . “Let's not kid ourselves; most the more important person.” you may have noted, this firm went bankrupt a they actually were there. Pained me, too. Brooks School graduates the oth-|plant to process tallow and candle LE & f what's great and lasting in this’ After all. IT have seen abroad, while back and I give you one guess as to how John and James Gottlieb, a pair of truckers in er day, “T have observed that grease for industrial use. He knew! THAT IS one of many such ©f What's gre I think that tradition is worthy many of our millions we're likely to get back. Chicago, and Paul O. Buckley, a director of Lus-| nothing is as important in the his ‘business, he had some maney cases that illustrate the trend country has been created through to be upheld. y : tron, in any event, organized the Commercial American way of living as work, and he found a suitable workshop in the Old World. © Americans the private initiative of hold and al Big Trucks but No Houses Home Equipment Cqrp. to rent the trucks, These Our concept of success from the for rent. originally emigrated frém Europe stubborn men, often in tha face of they bought from the White Motor Car Ca. of pioneer days was embodied in
Tomorrow — Where nobody
THE MANAGEMENT once had high hopes of - (wovaliand at $6500 each, but with no money down. the word work." counts.
building so many houses that it would need hun- After all, they did have a contract with Lustron. dreds of trucks .hauling Bunireds Py Liallers 1 The records showed that between them the — building sites all over the land. So it made a dea ttlieb Brothers and B J Il g to rent 200 of these behemoth tractors and 600 Gottlieb Br > 8 uck ey owned all the stock
v - - — - ——— - - a ——— - vel > ] ; ’ ir . ® . - ; fofet Sed sealers to Yani away the Douses tout: ° S04 HINT. Sut Sher puid in only SO vn Teaching Best At Kindergarten / Elementary | School Level
plus $8000 for entertainment and travel: James
” » rr to get awav from the notion overwhelming odds. Let's not UNDER the rent control law. that the State stands above its change it any more than we have e ght, 1980, be United Feature . > £10 § ri " ’ It still fs. Mr, Curry was no hig “bail” had to be approved hy citizens. Our state was created to.” wm Bndiate .
Be : " : , bis Phe. CoD to attend school for a period of The corporation paid $3 million of our money 00 got 357,000 in wages and $13000 in ex- Research on Methods Most Concentrated hamsidlly: Jow, They COMpareill (IF Jber- i _ higher sary three months or more. Convae to rent these trucks, most of which it never used while his brother, John, took $32.000 and } ’ : . favorably with many smaller raises. {re je! 1 Hosat all, and not until now did its officials discover iy in entertainment mopev On Job of Instructing in Primary Grades communities and some of equal More than 45,000 children are legcant dre a or had the that for a soell they were paying rent on trucks ' iid a : ray size or-larger. , expected to be enrolled in our pital, / " av y anufactured. Who Was Entertained? By CARL HENN - | A young man or woman of the public elementary schools this Flower Mission are organized into that hadn't even been manu - P classes And not until the RFC's own sleuths began ~~ WHO THEY entertained. the record did not (Fourth of a Series) Salibe Gesianded Dy Patents ofitql, "Each
snooping around the back yard of the giant plant Show. And all this time these giant tractors were
—r ES {school children, however, is worth) J: will be cur teachers’ respon-, Each Od rs oa! his " : mm ’ ; own peculiar co : \ snooping 5, lined up on blocks outside the house factory, wait-| Perhaps the best teaching in education today is being dons in More than $50 a week, According sibility to see that the children X in Ohio did they learn they never had 200 trucks, ing eid to come out. They seldom did. kindergartens and elementary schools. to the hoard of directors of. thejearn” to read, writs, Ba IB anc ' but only a total of 160. ; For our $37.5 million we taxpayers got 2000 Methodology, the scientific approach to “how to teach” rather Federation of Indianapolis Public listen, speak and think well, {There must be The gentlemen who rented the trucks, ome of pressed steel houses, finished inside and out like than “what to teach.” has
concentrated most of its research on the School Teachers, Other
actions necessary to Nig experience in family, eommuwhom just happened to be a director of Lustron, bathtubs so that they could be cleaned with a Problems of instructing at the lowest level
Jobs Block Training complete an education include{Rity ana sthool if he is 10 achieve took in the $3 million on a total investment of garden hose. We spent the $3 million to ove the Parents can be sure educators constantly are striving to raise! 17 the teacher finds other em- skill® in classifying, observing, |“ Indianapolis schools have found $2000. The evidence showed this before a group houses on the trucks, some of which weren't even!the level of elementary teaching. | ~~ pe————— I
ployment during summer months analyzing, demonstrating, con-| of startled Senators. ® there, and where that leaves us I hate even to The problem today lies in per-| Teachers with no experience to augment his income, he is un- structing, repairing, participat80 now the RFC is charging ‘em with fraud, mention, - suading embryo teachers to and a Bachelor of Arts degree able ‘to return to school for more ing, co-operating and studying. - / ' (choose elementary schools as begin in Indianapolis at $2600 a
- : : : training, perhaps another degree, Language Arts {sociations and the school admin. their field. vear and rise to a top salary of rhe Board of School Commia- Elementary pupils should learn istration.
* : : Fy A teacher shortage is not yet $4150 after 16 years. ; sioners of Indianapolis School |5n 1 studi s : ; ; sioner: : ’ guage arts, social studies,| Virgil Stinebaugh, superintend1 he Quiz Mc 1ster ? ? ? Test Y our Skill : ? ? ? apparent in Indianapolis. The| Those with a Master of Arts City has not committed g
success in achieving this co-ordin-ation by extensive co-operation {between the Parent-Teacher As-
; itself to! e,-health and|ant 8 public school system has enough degree begin at $2800 and rise to mathematics, aclents, hes On ot cliucls, las long Sivegated
tent teachers to staff its 60 $4600 after 21 years Tates iano of the present salaryqafety education, music, art and|participation of parents in- the competent teachers to s ; $460 . si
” = rates, But large ‘salary jumpsi,..ctical arts, [school interests of their children, . Why was “The SkatIt a portrait = Gilbert a hat penalty can be imposed on. enumerators kindergartens and 82 elementary | East Chivago Higher {are opposed because they would,” The children with defective, At his request, P-TA groups Stuart, once attributed to Gainsborough? Who divulge U. 8. census information? -18chools. . | East Chicago, in contrast, be-/Push the tax rate too high a ivision must be enrolled in sight/have heen active over the city in “The Skater” was first exhibited in the Royal A fine of $1000 x a Plagha Jail. | More Required gins its teachers with A.B. degrees Present. The School Board pre- saving classes. Those with de- surveying the number of
exhil : - Stuart’ , = | Enrollment intreases, however, at $3000 and gives them $4800 fers to grant raises slowly. {fective hearing receive lip reading sign this Bauer hi ors a Ture to To what country did Panama formerly belong? require more and more _feachers after 15 al give M.A. degree<| Another Indianapolis policy op- instruction twice weekly. A in later. Shown again at the Royal Academy in 1878, Colombia. The people of Panama declared theirito instruct the growing number of ‘holders begin at $3100 and rise to posed by the Federation is the|rective program for those with!ning future . tentatively attributed in the catalogue to independence on Nov. 8,.1903. ; : ichildren. : 1 $5200 in 15 years. {custom - of giving “experienced defective speech is carried on, +A recent move bas been the Gatnsbo rough. ~ ¢ ee 0 0 ~~ °| Indianapolis finds itself ¢bm-| At least eight ather Indiana teachers credit tor only half the "Crippled children are taught in suance of invitations 30 Jdingap- 5 ; : > 2 eda me ol Why are ceitain moths Called millers? ipeting with other and higher-pay-| cities pay slightly or Substantially) time they have spent instructing ihe James E. Roberts a fund | lie busine ang exe Ae. ’ = EF Sd : The word “miller” is often applied to the small ing cities for the services of more than Indianapolis. They in- elsewher®, Wh - lina specia en . h a schools, : - Whit are the names of the two most important: light-colored _— 8, Taian ap) that the a Hg es of teachers -eolleges. clude Ft Wayne, Gary, Evans- Some Indiana cities grant full 8chool, There are special Slassen) deling teachers and ; pyramids {1 Mexico? ©. : and the body are covered with a white or light! The competition will grow strong- ville, Elkhart, Anderson, South credit for outside experience. for children with lowered Wiegity. hes ng 3 : The Pyramid of the Sn and the Pyramid of flour-like powder, just as the elothes of an old-‘er as the need for instructors be- Bend, Hammond and Whiting. Others which grant half credit) Home teachers are pro jor achie ‘the Moon. SAT > a fashion miller became covered with flour. comes greater, re - Indianapolis salaries are not fur the first six to 1 years make those who are physically unab
* : = 4s il fil y
{in each Seba 1 Tn formation is necessary in pla { schoolroom needs.
