Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 September 1951 — Page 57
9, 1951 ° Near Times test
11 for letters rents in The . Contest. parent subter by midrill receive a ers must be ime or be in
re than 100 ese subjects: fow Parents ol Better”; ow Teachers ool Better." the property e decision of 1al, Winners I'he Sunday
ghts 1g conducted The Times How Good 1s last article 1 on Page 23. ts of entry rday:
tell whether ested in- his ou find time s school and ery child is 3 parent can interests. ..” ys a great life, If he home he will t school...”
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ngs needed ; today is a ram in the ninth grades 1 have some and choose ibjects wise-
's an ardent in addition and teacher understand-
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¢hina news ergency has hree million and Chahar
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618 Martindale; 273 Martindale. 34th; Pa-
Grant 8. Xennington;
}41 E. Tabor bus, O.; Dora lesola
Force; Dorothy eld, By: Marilyn L.
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"Il; Zedith E, 50 N. Kenwood; N. Kenwood rmy: Wilma M,
1650 E. Fall ddings, 24, 526
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Lafayette, Ind. , Marines; Jo« olis 1110 Capitol , Ind.: Dorothy itennial . 3023 Clifton; 3. 5936 Univer=
Inds Mae Loretta A,
‘ownshurg, Meridian, 439 Park;
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Kingsley; N. Park nnersville, } Broadway, Langley;
E. 19th;
Warren ‘en Hotel, ille, Ind.; Lore ville, Ky, 1039 N. Mount; 4931 Caroline. dianapolis; Bare 0 Brazil. 40 Lee; Jewell
nh. ny; Kathryn L,
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: Willie M, vs,
Betty vs. vs, Clarence O,
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BIG SKIES AND SCHOOLS—These groups of grade school children alreay have put camp instruction to the test at Versailles State
- Park.
By DAVE WATSON
N adventure in educa--
tion will be launched with laughter and the hum of bus engines tomorrow at the entrances of two Indianapolis public schools. That's when 60 grade school children embark on the maiden voyage to Versailles State Park to inaugurate the new school camp program proposed by Dr. Herman L. Shibler, superintendent of schools here. The skies and the woods of the sprawling 5400 acre park will become classrooms for the youngsters and their week-long study of nature and conservation subjects which will supplement regular school work.
v =
THE SHOUT of youthful voices during recreation periods
will be nothing new /to the youngest of Indiana's state parks.
Besides the throngs which parade to the site during summer vacation months, other school units in the state already have instituted camp courses as part of regular fall semester work. On higher levels, adults from Purdue University sometimes study there, in addition to school faculty members who spend brief study periods in the park. When he proposed establishment of a public school camp, Dr. Shibler described the plan
as. a recent development in edu-.
cation. He said that many schools participate in similar activities, and some school systems operate their own camps. San Diego, Cal, operates a
year-round program, as does Long Beach, Cal. Inside the Hoosier state, Newcastle
schools this month are starting their third year of camping as part of the regular grade school curriculum. o ” #
APPROVED by the School Board, the plan will be put to a practical test tomorrow by 60 children from Schools 33 and 78. There will be one teacher on duty for each 15 pupils.
From No. 33 will be Miss Joanna 8. Guss .and Maurice Frost., Mrs. Irma Biedenmeister and Theodore Witte will represent the supervision staff from No. 78.
A school nurse will be on duty at the camp, and a physician will be standing by in Versailles for emergencies. Each Wednesday Lou Haussen-
Fewer Are Waiting for New Automobiles Now
SUNDAY. SEPT. 9, 1951 City Pupils Embark Upon. ~~
Adventure in Education
GRASS, TREES AND ARITHMETIC—The shelter house surrounded by grass and trees will | be a camp focal point for pupils in school camp. .
stab, former chief park naturalist, will be there, and A. N. Liming, district extension
* forester, will be there on Fri-
days. Albert Mahin, consultant in distributive education, will be in direct charge of the camps and will be on duty throughout the three week period.
» " n
AFTER the initial 60 children have finished their park studies and returned. Saturday 90 more will leave from Schools 54, 2 and 57 for the second week, and a third group of 90 will go: later from Schools 22 and 69.
These trips to the state park are not extended summer vacation periods for the fifth and sixth graders who attend. Besides supplementing regular courses with nature study and conservation, pupils will be instructed in social studies, English, arithmetic and other routine subjects. Dr. Shibler said some camps provide a stimulus to practical learning through organization of camp banks, stores and post
‘offices. The pupil learns to write
checks, make deposits and withdrawals. He puts his English lessons to practice by writing letters home and drafting compositions
> which describe camp activities
of the week. ” s n
AN IMPORTANT undertone of the program is its moulding of self reliance. While at camp the pupils will shoulder the supervised responsibility of preparing and serving breakfast and keeping morning dishes clean. Other meals will be Jrepared by a trained staff.
By THE TIMES AUTOMOBILE EDITOR
NEW CAR FEVER hasn't struck, but the itch is be-
ginning to stir.
Manufacturers aren't saying much. - They've got pro- why he gave up a profitable busi- floor on excess duction troubles, born of the scrounge for materials. they've got dealers to keep pep-| {wise buyer will bet the other way,
Dealers have made their profits,namely that the new models Will 1, got caught with a low floor trucks at his W. Washington St. And arrive on time, 3
ped--up: toe
fn the fast-moving lines.
wo
some don't want to press much Thejr Day, at Last
more, to Uncle Sam.
While new car production is|the
ces are ‘going up. about 25 per cent. pri ZONE up stocks are getting thin.
|The softened Reg. W helped by| stretch of the payment period un-ieytting monthly payments about! (freat Salt Lake, the nation’s like a cork.” der Regulation W helped a little,’20 per cent, let in a lot of buyers largest inland sea, has reached its but not much in the néw car field. | Who couldn't make the grade b2- highest point in nearly 20 years. jay in 1847 and in 1850 records
The GM-Ford-Chrysler lines are independents
dropping,
Waiting lists are falling, too. The
moving. And the
can use it. » » »
They give all their money
{ USED CARS which have been] {in' the doldrums, are up, among dealers,
more aggressive
And
It production schedules
tinue to slide for the rest of the who usually have a tough battle,lv.,, wholesale auction prices are showing more life, but they i, z00m, That means prices to] . ithe consumer will do likewise.
rue PRIVATE GUESSES Aluminum Blocks?
among motor men are that the big companies will go right ahead! with their ’52 models. ‘There is an /hoaq engines for both four and
And ness.
con-
is _ THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
i
33 o
5251 BLVD. Lovely all-brick Georgian style home with a life-time roof. This substantial and gracious home also has a brick 2-car ga-
- N " Po FIRST OFFERING. WASHINGTON
rage. You'll appreciate the interesting description. See ad in Classification 42.
4
<Q
7850 BARLUM DRIVE. OPEN 3 - 6. 79th and Road 431. New buff brick home on a hill- _ side setting The ad description of this lovely home sounds wonderful . . . so many new homemaking aids! See the ad in Classification 42, 5
OPEN SUNDAY 2:00 to 6:00. 6159 North Pennsylvania. Four-bedroom center hall French Provincial. You may have quick possession of this spacious and gracious
AFTER CLASS, THE TEST—Practical arithmetic is put to
work after class by grade school pupils in a simulated store at
Versailles Park. home . . . the owner has purchased a : smaller one. Details in ad, see ClassificaThis is the adventure in cdu- camp expenses. Another 3100 tion 42, :
cation to be launched here toIOTrow. ’ In support of the plan, the Indianapolis Garden Club nas donated $300 to help defray
has been given by the Sertoma Club of North Indianapolis. The State Department of Conservation is co-operating in organizational work.
} 1946-48, at a time when the comThe Hoster Deal pany “was involved in extra
PEOPLE WHO KNOW brisk, spending. affable George Hoster wondered Ang once caught with the low
profits, which means high taxes, he had little ; He felt the money he was of- incentive to go on. NEAR HOLIDAY PARK on Sixty-third Street. [feted was much better than the He will remain active in the This lovely stone residence just completed,
is now available for purchase. There is a very complete and interesting decription of this home in the ad in Classification 54-A,
money he was making. Actually, auto trade, with used cars and
lon his excess profits taxes which location. And the way he figures,
{were based on earnings from he will be just about as well off.
More Lake, Less Salt.
1 By United Press
d from all over the world for the SALT LAKE ITY, Sept. 8 unique experience of “floating Mormon pioneers settled the The area around the lake is sO of the lake's depth, size and salt flat that a rise of a foot or less content were started. greatly increases its size and reduces the salt content. i | Saltair, widely - known resort Streams in the nearby Waarea on the southeast edge of the satch Mountains flow into the
Lake Lacks Outlet
3705 STANTON. OPEN 2-4. This interesting 5-room home has several appreciated
lake, was left dry as lake waters lake via the Jordan and Bear extras . . . venetian blinds throughout, ; receded ‘a decade ago. The, resort, | Rivers. However, there are no storm doors ond windows, and bin-fed Kaiser-Frazer are working with|y iit on 2500 piles driven into outlet, and that accounts for the stoker., Now see the ad in Classification the- lake bottom, has been sur- lake's saltiness. 7 43,
the idea of aluminum, valve-in-
atmosphere of doubt about major gix cylinders.
changes now. But informed auto] executives are of the opinion that _ the big companies won't “about-| face” in ‘their development pro-
grams.
It would cut the motor weight 50 per dead weight tb haul around. And that ought to show up in fuel consumption. Look for a dampener‘on new| The cars are model talk for the next ten But they may not be ready for)
cent, that much
“Gn test” no
weeks. Then, like a puff of fresh| 52 line.
air,- the auto industry will suddenly get excited about forth-
coming changes.
The rumor balloons will be cut American
loose, and the good
on wheels—new models,
gadgets, easy riding,-
‘safety and beauty.
IF THE WHISPERED changes come through, they wit be revo-| lutionary for some makers. Ford, ! the talks say, will hit the “thrifty . six” field hard. And go to valves-
In-head.
But right now, thére isn’t much
corner
The talk’s other way,
gt 4 Gt :
about the biggest dgmestic news Service.
new
power, | Of the time Buick
existence.
Truckers, Too .WHEN TIRES FAIL, and you! discover’ you haven't kept them The water can’t hold any more in ringing 10 minutes late this suminflated, don’t think you're alone, solution. . } | Truck drivers are just as gui And with fleet re
556 Watches
BUICK HANDED
al money.
that|fadlure is due to that old bugaboo that a person cannot sink. Thou- out “thie start of’the Rev. Carl A. ; f corded rubber— on. sands. flock to the lake each year Glover's smo.
less
w. & few inches deep.
OUT 556 watches to retiring employees. It was the first group eligible, | {with a total of 20,000 years of from year to year in-proportion ince that ti ! , : public will get hot and bothered | Average length of serv-| to Hil RR SD Tem Bl Pp Since that time it has never had ice was 29 years, more than half the Jake was at its highest point ,has been in i, 1873, the salt content of the
Ity. | For a rough idea of just how Congregational Church across ewners, tires cost salty it is, mix one cup of salt the
B. F. Goodrich sald last week well and taste. about new models. that 70 per cent of truck tire
rounded once again by water. Today's Great Salt Lake is | When the lake reached its all- merely a puddle in the basin of time low in 1940 of 4193.65 feet pre-historic IL.ake Bonneville, above sea level, bathers at the During and following the great § resort had to ride a specially ice age, Lake Bonneville covered built train to reach water only nearly all the western portion of | Utah, parts of southern Idaho The level of the lake is now and western Nevada, | v 4199.1 feet above sea level and| It was nearly the size of Lake [the six foot increase has boosted Michigan—346 miles long and {water to a depth of more than 145 miles wide. five feet under the pavilion. | The lake reduced slowly to ap{proximately its present size through several dry ages after it varies paq dropped below the pass.
How modern venient, com for you??? If
Saltiness Varies
The lake's saltiness
&
When an outlet.
\water was only 13 per cent. In T00 Much Competition
11940, the lake was saturated with PAWTUCKET, R. I. Sept. 8 (UP)-—~The 10:45 a. m. chimes on
salt—27.6" per cent. At that point, salt precipitates. gt pauls Episcopal Church are
v -
mer at the request of the Park
=~
A street, Because the Park with three cups of water, sti Church has its summer services hy ~ * an hour earlier than normal, the ‘The ‘salt water is so bouyant St. Paul chimes were drowning
= iin SRY * ’ 4
| Buy A More Suitable Hone Now!
to Inspect the Wide Selection Found In Today’s Times na Every sunday
the extra advantages of home ownership, an equity in your future security and the comforts of easier living. Choose your home now!
he Indianapolis Times
o Indiana's Largest Real Estate Directory
umm PAGE 55
rT Toa ee TER PZ ” Der CR PA At
Shown here are a few of the hundreds of home values offered in the Real Estate Section of Today's Times . .... J
Whether you seek a modest bungalow or a more imposing home, the real estate ads in today’s Times offer you by far the widest selection from which to choose . . . they're located in every section of the city, suburbs and country.
HUNDREDS of these home values are advertised ONLY in The Times! From this interesting variety select several that seem to meet your needs and desires and arrange to personally inspect them right away!
5337 KENWOOD AVE. English brick veneer. ‘With 1 main floor bedroom (plus 2 wp), wonderful closets and the other quality features this comfortable home is quite versatile. See the ad in Classification 42.
6061 OXFORD. 3-Bedroom Stone and Frame. This “almost new” home will delight the | home-maker who prefers light natural wood trimmed interior and complete rooms for gracious entertaining. See the description in the ad . . . Clessification 42, :
SCHOOL 84. Are you an ardent admirer of the true colonial home? This 3-bedroom, 2'2-bath home will please you. Here is a truly wonderful family home. For further details see the ad in Classification 42.
OPEN TODAY 3:30 to 5:30. 1103 W. Kessler Blvd. Here is one of our most desirable locations near the country clubs. Only 5900" north, This lovely family home is on wooded property. See the ad for further details, Classification 42, ér
y
5620 BROADWAY. One of the northwest’s ; OPEN TODAY 3-6. New stone and frame. Roomy with a big lot. 3201 W, 57th St. “This is one of the homes featured in the Parade of Homes.” Many details are outlined in the ad. See Classification 54-A.
neatest bungalows, The room arrangements in this home make it very versatile and you will appreciate the convenience of schools, transportation -and shopping center. See the ad in Classification 42.
Modern homes are just full of wonderful planning and conveniences to make housekeeping so
easy! These home-making helps
SV
could not be had for any price 6500 W. MARKET.
3-Bedroom, modern, nearly new bungalow. This cosy home may be just right for the family. that
fifty years ago!
wants “elbow room”. Situated on about 1 acre, youll find the house detailed in the ad in Classification 45,
is your home? Is it easy to live in . . . confortable, sized right and in the best location not, then buy now the RIGHT home, and have
® Now in Section 4 ® 2
A Scripps-Howard Newspaper
a
