Sullivan Daily Times, Volume 47, Number 11, Sullivan, Sullivan County, 15 January 1945 — Page 2
FAGE TWO
SULLIVAN DAILY TIMES MONDAY, JAN- 15, 1945.
"Hilton Icriljj
iv an, Indiana
mxm
Telephone 13 j
;jj Poynter : Publisher auor Poynter Jamison Manager and Assistant Editor ) U. Adams Editor
..r r- ioi H ft I f
Ml (1N0N C. EBERIIART
'DI$?XlSur0 BY KING FSAWRBS ' SYNOiCATe, JNC.
SMI Mi
1
.ered as second-class matter July i, 1W)8 in the Postoffice at li van, Indiana, under the Act of Congress of March 3, 1879.
ininhed daily except Saturday and Sunday at no west jaciwon ax. of fBtt there was something.
Alexia stopped yawning so sud-
' CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE The fleeting glimpse I had of the rat reminded me of a very trivial
tiling I had forgotten up to then. "Why, vc-s." I said. "As a matte"
United Presi Wire Service.
National Advertising, Re presentative: I Thei and Simpson, 393 Seventh Avenue, New York (1) N. Y. j Subscription Rate: ! carrier, per week 15 Cents In City j . , By Mail In Sullivan And Adjoiniiif Cuntiei: j Months . $1.50i nth (with Times furnishing stamped envelope) 80 Cents
t .... ..... $3,001- to the door and open it and look?"
deiily her jaws snapped together aid Jlauil's scorn chanced to alert interest. 1 went on, "There was a kind of bump against the closed dojrvr to my. patient's room." '"Bump!" exclaimed District Attorrnty Soper. "Yes. , Something in the hall struck against the door." "Something J What?" cried the
D. A. "What was it? Diiln't you go
By Mail Elsewhere: A AA
ar , .w
: MonUis ' , $2.00 nth (with Times furnishing envelope) 35 Cents
INNING PEACE WILL REQUIRE AS GKE AT. ENTHUSIASM AS WINNING WAR Despite the Nazi offensive that temporarily set our aimin I!e-lgium Lack on their heels, the president's budget SMijie sends a flicker of sunshine through the clouds of i i i j i t j i i i i . r . . . . 1. .1
r. ri:s Duatret estimates snow mat at last we nave reacneo.
; financial turning point of the conflict. Barring entirely foreseeable contingencies we have put behind us one-hun-'!cl billion dollar budgets. . For the current fiscal year we have dropped to $85 bilns, a decline of 817 billions. The reason for the decline, as e president explains, is that the nation is now on a "mainnance basis" which is necessarily less costly than the peiv 1 of preparation when huge capital outlays were required, ng with much experimental designing and production. From now on the war may be expected to cheapen in
i ins of dollars, but the astronomical budget figures quite
unter-balance this faint encouragement. The new money
lume will increase total authorizations to about 450 billions, this most costly of all wars is swiftly approaching the half llion figure a mathematical term wheh hitherto has been
cd almost exclusively by astronomers. -
Now that a figure with 12 ciphers enters the financial aim, "the devastating waste of war is pointed up as never fore. Nearly a trillion man hours have been lost already jirs that night have been applied to constuctive producn 'and the literal abolition' of poverty. The ancient political omise' of two -chickens for every pot, or even two automo-
les for every garage could have been easily fulfilled, if dur-
g the last three years the world had been striving as en-
usiastically to supply human comforts as it has been striv-
to achieve human destruction. Just why people give more enthusiastic backing to de-
ruction than to construction is one of human nature's m.ys-
rirs. 'e,aviutill starching for the moral equivalent of wa1
I 'ifcfi will supuly an economv of abundance. Hut the inosl
i.rdcncd reactionary will adm't that it would be a betrayal the thousands of galhnt Americans who have died for the 'moevatie idevl. if. after their sacrifices, We fail to insure sting and prosperous peace. . . In order to d this the wwedure 'f C,jn,,(' nmt 1' .i'x-tly the O "ixis:!o of ;H mocelre rfter WovM Wnr I. Afr that war the Senate sabotaged the Leu me-of Nations, and ingress saboiageJ irsjeritv with sins of omission and comi.ssiuii too nuniejoirs to mention. But the capstone of its cnutrionr-i blunders the Fonlney-McCinriber tariff bill. The depression which ensued was almost as costly, in verse, hs the second w n Du' iny th;s war we are destrbyg wealtli -it the rate of $200 million dollars daily, but durthe- depression we went on a sort of sit down strike and iled to produce up to capacity. In 19:"!2 onr national income dropped to $10 billions, hen around $1)0 billions would have been required to afford .11 employment. For ten years this waste continued, though i a diminishing scale as the New Deal pump priming stunuted business. Hut it is no exaggeration to say that during
cse ten years the nation lost a total of 8300 billions in goods
id services that might have been produced but were not. Mil
an casualties, too. were numerous, though not so spectacu- : as those we suffer during war. Still, there was the toll kat by suicides, uismess failures, and neurotic and psv-
.opathie casualties from idleness, despair and malnutrition.
AH of this devastating lailuve after the last war, with second war to top off the dismal record, explains the pround need for winning the next peace as well as the war. ud in order to win it, we must display just as much enthussm for constructive effort as for destructive" effort. To do
lis will require a willingness to adont new attitudes and dar-
g exiieviments.. Jf we balk at initiative and daring and
:arn merely for normalcy as we d;d after VrUl War I, we
tall again .betray tire maimed heroes and valiant dead who
tved us with their initiative and daring on a thousand battle
elds.
"Yes, I did open the door and I
saw . . . i stopped again on the verge of Buying I had seen Nicky coming from a room down the hall. But that was wrung. I had seen Nicky, but that was before something whati ever it was had struck against the door, and struck so sharply it roused nit and the cat. No; that was wrong, too; the cat had already aroused, as if he heard simieone in the hall. The bump against the door had come later. Arid when I had got to the door and opened it no one was in the hall. The District Attorney said," Well, who didyou see ? Who did you see ?" "I didn't see anyone. 1 don't know who it was. I saw nothing."
"Hal yon . . ." began Soper ex
plosively, and Nugent said, "All
rif.ht. Miss Keate. We believe you." His eyes looked very narrow and grac-ii. He went on quickly, "You wOre in the library when you heard
tlifl sound of something fallm. What did you do?"
' ,;"1 ran upstairs." I told him of it ain, briefly. And brought fdrVnrd what Seemed to be, up to then, a bit of new evidence, or at least a
new fact. That was the matter of
Craig's being found in the linen
closet, unconscious and bleeding
fiSim a bruise on Ins temple.
"He says somebody was in the
' hiill and struck him,"- 1 explained. ! The District Attorney interrupt led.' 11 Who?" 1 ' ;
"Ae said he, doesnH' know. J5ut if
, RCaieone (Ud that it .proves tnere
was an intruder, a--a thief . . . "But he said lie was in the hall when he va struck," saiil Soper, lQokinjC little impressed with his olvh astuteness, and very pompous. "You say you found him in the linen room." . ' "I did. Or rather Miss CabltJ found .him there first." Again, glances went to Drue; again no one . questioned her. "Someone must hiye dragged him into the linen et'fset and left him there. A man, I mean." ' ."A woman could have done it," btgan Soper, and Nugent cut-in rather quickly. "I'll question Craig Brent later." Soper frowned, tapped ,iis stomach and began again briskly. "Now then, about Conrad Brent's jysiness affairs . . ." . That did not take a very long Sme; everyone I think was convinced that Conrad's business afinirs were in good order and in any jise it would be an easy matter for ' ;liem to find out through his bank-1
era and his lawyer. There seemed to be, however, little question on
that point. He had been a rich man, ljving well within an income which was, certainly, on the more or less
lavish side. Only later inquiry could confirm K, ' but just then there
seemed to be no reasonable doubt but that his affairs were perfectly
ound. Nothing however was said of his
will which seemed to me another omission. After that they went into the matter of alibis very cautious
ly, very saaveiy, so one didn t at first realize the exact trend of all their detailed questions of time. In the end, however, so far as I could
ee, no one really had an alibi ex
cept Craig,
Nicky, at least, had admitted his
presence in the morning room when Conrad returned. Had he seen Drue? Was he going to tell of her
interview with Conrad? There was no way to know and no way to read Nicky's enigmatic face. At length the District Attorney observed, rather pettishly, 'that there was no alibi, really, for murder by poison, looked impatiently at Nugent and fidgeted. Nugent looked back at him and shook his head, only a little, almost imperceptibly, but as if he'd said, "Wait not yet," I saw that. And I thought I prepared myself for it. I didn't really; no one does against catastrophe. But I knew that it was coming; they
had asked about a hypodermic, so
they had seen that tiny red mark on Conrad Brent's arm. They had searched Drue's room and mine and had taken' away the little bag in which she carried instruments and the few drugs she had, so they knew she had a supply of digitalis and knew she didn't have a hypodermic
as I had and as any nurse normally would have. They had estab
lished the fact that Conrad s medicine was gone, box and all, so he couldn't liave taken it himself.
They wouldn't have far to look for a motive, or a witness of sorts, either, for Nicky must have seen Drue going to the library even if, for any purpose of his own, he did not then admit it. Above all, the look Sopej; and Nugent exchanged admitted ? previously agreed-upon
purpose. - .
So they had not yet questioned
Drue. My feeling about, that was right. Obviously they thought that it would weaken her to have to sit there before them and hear the case
built up possibilities eliminated,,
circumstances set forth so they were indisputable. . , . -'I felt cold, as if all mv muscles
had tightened hard. I felt that I
had to look at Drue and I wouldn't. It came sooner than I expected
and it was worse. Matid at last
brought the thing to its ugly climax. She said, interrupting a question as to any possibility of the medicine box having been empty and thrown away by Conrad himself, previous to his attack, "Noniiense!" Everyone looked at her. She said again, "That's utter nonsense! Conrad never would have done that. He always kept a supply of digitalis on hand. Besides, as Claud has already told you, his prescription had
been refilled only three days ago.
He hadn't had an attack since, so it was a full, new supply. And I don't
see why you don't get to the point.
He was given a hypodermic, you
know that; Claud saw what he felt
sure was the mark and told me. No
body but a nurse would have given
him a hypodermic a nurse or a
doctor, and Claud wasn't hero. And you know who had a motive."
1 asked quickly. A hypodermic
mark?"
Nugent glanced at me and lLaud stopped, shooting a black
look at me. Nugent said, "Do you
want --to say something, Nurse Keate?" "Yes. I don't see how anyone, even a doctor, can make a positive statement about the mark made by a hypodermic needle. It is very small; frequently so small that it can't be seen at all. The skin is elastic and instantly closes after the needle is withdrawn." Maud's, eyes snapped. "It frequently shows, too." I shrugged. "I don't question Dr. Chivery's statement to the effect that he found some sort of small mark that might have been made by a hypodermic needle. I do question anyone heing able to say with any degree of certainty that a well, a bare pinprick is the mark
of a needle," "Miss Keate," frowned Maud. "You are .not here to question t he veracity of the doctor you are working for!" "It's the plain truth.. Ask anyone." Maud whirled around tov.ard Nugent. "Dr. Chivery's word has never been questioned. As I was about to say, it is obvious that only one person in the house had a motive. That was Drue Cable." t "-Mrs. Cbivery , . ." began Nugent, but she went on so vehemently that her tight little body jerked; her black eyes plunged in little bursts from one to the other of us. "She must, have come down to the library to see him; to try to persuade him not to make her go. He had told her she must leave today. She threatened him. yesterdayafternoon. I heard her and so did you, Nicky. You heard her say, 'I could kill you for this.' I know exactly what happened. She came to the library and she accused him of breaking1 up her marriage. Conrad had an attack and asked her for medicine; she went to the desk and and took the medicine away, pre-) ,- tended it was gone. So Conrad,;
3 dying, begged her to help him. She
was a nurse, uojv could tie know what she would do . . . ?" "Stop! We'll get a lawyer. You can't accuse ..." I rose and Nugent was at my side, his hand tight on my arm. Drue looked like a ghost, with great dark eyes fastened on Maud. There was a shadow of a smile on Alexia's lips. Maud swept on vigorously, black eyes snapping. "So she gave him a hypoderniicof digitalis and she gave him too much. It killed him. She thought it would never be traced. That's how it happened . . ." (To be continued) Coturitlit bV liignoft Q. Kbttrbirt; I Biatrtbulfld br Kijii Pttturci SlDtiictte. IM.
BOWEL CLEANING POWER pTCSCri ptlOR Filled OF ERB-HELP MEDICINE A " J . JI A man recently took ERB- UV6f 1 3 IdilllOII I IH16S HELP and said afterward that he RfComnieiKicj l(1 d0 just two things: ; never would have believed his relieve constipation and gas on the
Doay contains so much inthy sub- stomach. stance. His stomach, intestines, ns successful prescription is now put bowels and whole system were' "P uncl" the name of ADLERIKA. k-,iv,i, i . , tt u j t"et a bottle of Adlenka next time thoroughly cleansed. HIS head-, you stop at druggist's and see aches ended, several skin erup- for yourself how quickly gas is relions on his face dried up over- lieved and gentle but thorough bowel right. At present he is an alto- action follows. Good for old and( young.
aether different man. feeline fine "--""ion, "se omy as oirectcu.
in every way. ERB-HELP contains 12 Great Herbs; so don't go on suffering! Get this new medicine. Bennett's Drug Store. Sold in Carlisle at Anderson's Drug Store.
Get Adlerika from your druggiml today
Smith Drug Store.
; How To Relieve Bronchitis' ! Cre'omulsion relieves proinptly bo cause it goes right to the seat of the trouble to help loosen and expel i germ laden phlegm, and aid nature to soothe and heal raw, tender, inflamed bronchial mucous membranes. Tell your druggist to sell you a bottle of Creomulsion with the im- ' derstanding you must like the way it I quickly allays the cough or you are
to nave your money duck. v
CREOMULSION
I for Coughs, Chest Colds, Bronchitis
Bits Of News
, 1 ! (Continued from Page 1) ins miirh ahmit miirianre and
practicing it but little. We do not The promotion of Harry L. Hop- two-week standardization course allow enmieh time for our teach- kins from the grade of corporal in physical training.
San Antonio Aviation Cadet Cen-
iter, SSgt. Paul E. WecKley, ot ishelburn, Indiana, is attending a
physical
At the conclusion of the train-
ers to do a good job of guidance to sergeant has recently announc- -,
and we are not providing spec- ed by ueorge v. jumpei un. wm r ial personnel that is needed. Ten California, Commanding Officer ' frrm o hn hof the 335th Bombardment, tuined to then stations in the
different. Teachers will have the, Group. time; the schools will have the! Sgt. Hopkins, 25, is the tail personnal; the schools will be re- gunner on an Eighth Air Force
quired to provide guidance not B-17 Flying fortress. He is only for our teen-age youth, but participating in bombing attacks 1 i 1 1 J T AACC our adults and our disabled vet- on military and industrial tar- , L. I 1 lYL.D
erans. This guidance service will gets in .Germany and upon enemy increase our school costs for it defence positions in the path of will require time as a part of our the advancing allied armies in teachers regular schedules. But Western Europe, have you ever thought of the The airman is the son of Mr, cost of the lack of guidance in and Mrs. Frank Hopkins, 370 terms of early withdrawals, fail- South Kentucky Ave., Evansville, ures and retardations? Only re- Indiana. cently we were greatly concerned Prior to entering the army in
about out-of-school youth and January, la44, Sg'j. Hopkins was an( proper. Articles of 500 words
resulting youth delinquency. But employed as a machinist by the or less are preferred. All articles ten years from now the school Griggs Indiana Corporation, in sent to the Open Forum must be will not be through with youth Evansville. . signed and address given, in orwhen he leaves school. There will I i der that the editor may know be counselors for those youth! NAVY LIEUTENANT VISITS I the writer, however, the writer's
AAF Training Command for duty as training specialists in their particular field.
OPEN FORUM Letters and interviews of a suitable nature and proper newspaper interest are sought for this column, the editor reserving the right to censor or reject any article he may deem is not suitable
who no longer attend school full; Lt. and Mrs. William L. time. Adequate guidance will be ; SprtngeTTmd daughter,. Katherin
a preventive, rather than a cure, for youth delinquency.
name will not be published if requested. - - "' Articles published herein do not necessarily express the scuHaicnl of the Daily Times aud this paper may or may not agree with
visited over the week-end with Mr. and Mrs. O. L. Springer and
"In addition to the above ' Mr. and Mrs. Thomas J. Gallagchances, there will be other im-'her. Lt. Springer was en route
provements which we do not have to Charleston, S. C., which will be statements contained herein. time to discuss now. There will his headquarters lor the. time -j . be: A more flexible curriculum being. He has been stationed with mmmmmmmmmmummm
to take care of individual interest the Navy in the Carabbean area and aptitudes; remedial instruct- for the last twenty months, tion in reading, math, and oral,'
expression; a more vitalized pro-, AT SAN ANTONIO gram of school and community, SAN ANTONIO AVIATION health and physical education: a CADET CENTER, Texas At the program that really contributes I . to leisure time pursuits. j -. .
"There will be others. And so j the program of public education j will continue to expand and to I improve. Public education, indeed, is still in its infancy."
Quit paying rent and own a home. Special bargains on properly on installment plan. Also farms for sale. W. TMELLOTT
.iJJ.VVi,'jui'to'ltt:lV.l;;
(Vl J. Aikin & Sot FUNERAL HOME Dugjj-cr
"Aikiu's Service Costs No More."
1 !
No Bottleneck Here On (Jetting ?j0C Cash. You
1 ! T
, Will (Jot Immediate Action and thf Funds You Need to Do What You Want. Security Loan Co. Up Stairs New Oakley Lldg., N. W. Cornet of Square
chools Is Alpha Delphian I opic;
Local Educators Make Addresses
New officers were elected at were very sweet and much ape meeting of the Alpha Del- preciated by her audience. A. trio lian Club Monday, Jan. 8th, at composed of Bernadyne Hull,
ie home ot airs. Bulman. rs. Harrjr Lowry was re-elect -i president; Mrs. Omer Nickel, ice-president; Mrs. Dillon Routt,
-cretary; and Mrs. Ralph Shep-
Myra Laughlin and Naomi Hedriek, accompanied by Miss Wil
liams, sang "Oh Sing Your Song." words and music by Noble Cain. These young ladies have very
as far back as 1893 and 1895 are a Sullivan City School boy or girl "III. All youth will have acbadly in need of attention. Schools might find in our schools ten cess to similar educational opporin the county cannot get effic- years from today. : , timities regardless of family iniency out of eight months, and do "I. First, he would find educa- ctme. Few, if any, young people not, have the best of equipment tional services have been en- will feel the need to withdraw and supplies. Yet fine boys and larged and enrollments have from school because of the lack girls do come out oi these schools, greatly increased. Whereas, now of money. A requirement that all Mr. ' Boston thinks the future' we have about 1300 students, he youth must remain in school 'buildings must be used for com-'would find more than 2000 stu- through the twelfth year, carries munity Centers, for parents and dents enrolled. The increased en- with it a public obligation to teachers to work with schools, so rollment will be greatest in our provide youth with means of that the buildings can be used not high school. The compulsory earning money which they need eight but twelve months in the school age will be eighteen or the for personal expenses. Schools year. In looking to the futtire he completion of the twelfth grade, will cooperate with, business in sees the schools able financially to We will have an eight year sec- the community to provide parthave teachers whose time can be ondary school level: Lower or ( time employment for students: used, for counsel with the pupils, junior high school, grades 7. 8, 9;1 public funds for student aid will as it is, it is all needed for class- middle or senior high school, I be appreciably increased by l'edwork. This plan would enable the grades 10, II & 12; tipper or jun-leral. state, and perhaps local acschools to keep a history of the ior college, grades 13 ' & 14. tion. These services will perhaps pupils, thus . enabling the schools Whereas now, our evening class- extend to the Junior college and to answer requests that now come es are limited to a few vocational to the colleges and universities, in daily for something of the Olastes in the high school, ten and make it possible for any sturecord of the boys and girls for years from today the junior col- dent to meet the cost of eclucathe past ten years. He told of the lege will have broad and varied tion beyond high school. 700 pupils in four schools who offerings of free afternoon and- "iv. Citizenship education will are now being served with whole- evening classes, for employed' hold a foremost place in the pvosome meals at about 20c, at Pleas- youth and adfults. I gvum of Sullivan's schools. Durantville, Hymera, Graysville and -ii The purposes and programs j ing the past several years there Fahbanks. . ! uf our. schools will emphasize has been a strong interest for Mr. Billman, Superintendent of more of the general, as well as the j citizenship education on the part city schools, was introduced by' vocational education, for all stu- of teachers. For many years I've the program chairman and he ' djnts. Mhink we have done well seen that interest encouraged and presented to the club a hypo-1 in vocational education in view of grow more widespread. There is thetical case of what a Sullivan 1 the war need's, but we should nev- an ever-presen tendency to study school boy or girl might find injer lose sight of the fact that gen--history and other social studios our schools ten years from today, eral, preparatory education is the for their own sake, rather than Mr. Billman said: 'most important. Ten years from! for the sake of 'becoming better "The assignment of the sub-'nw we will get rid of war. and citizens. Our experience in the jeet "Our City Schools of Tomor-! settle down to the educational i depression, the war. and post-war
?rd, treasurer. Mrs. Ivan Boyll lovely voices, and the club en- jeet "Our City Schools of Tomor-. settle down to the
ad the- Bible reading and pray-1 joyed their program. . row; indicates that your society needs of our boys and girls. Our years will make us realize that
Mrs. Lowry read the State I In Mr. 'Boston's remarks he Us awake to the -urgent necessity vocational program . m bullivan' everjming in me, in trie long
resident's message from the De-! spoke of the loss of teachers due of foreseeing now. as best we can, lias recently been expanded and un, win depend on our ability
-inber Clubwoman. I to other opportunities offered the difficult problems, of adjust- we are trying to make it couU'ib-, w govern ourselves intelligently,
The program included a talk, by j with high salaries, the county not -iieqt that we must no doubt face, Ute to' these needs. Our vocational as a nation, in the interests of the
esse Boston on the county -viug iuhus iu jveep ineue leacn-! i lv i""u an-m umgjy. i"6""" v... i 6iv - '' v hools. and one by Dale Billman' ers. Schools of tomorrow must' H we fail to do. this, our govern- and will be modified to include respect the . rights of all people, n the city schools. This was fol-1. change. Enrollment (3,500) is low-j mept will be obligated to step in- more electrical building trades regardless of color, race or creed. ;wed by musical numbers under 'est in many years. In years that1 to- the job of education, as it has and business education. We will ' We shall refashion our programs -10 Hhwiifm nf - Miss Mildred . He ahead it will be greater, and' so iecehtly done, with organiza- likely have some courses' in re- to agree with these aims. Slu-
."illianis, who presented Miss' it is beginning to show now,, as ;t ions such as NYA and CCC. and frigeration, airplane construction, dents will have more opportunifaomi iledrick in three vocal last 'year there was the largest ! d We job for us. I don't think" air transportation, housing con- ties for direct participation in . . r .. . - . I : . 1 it.j i tl.a nr,r4- U1 li CVl ' rn ' .rttriin ortrl talatM rvn fMVIf nffnil'C Tllci, will 4'-,;.,
umbers, The Rose by Joseph uegunimg giaue ui eigin, years,, " " i uaipcu. j "-. iuvuu, ----- ...vj uicu
'lokev "Mv Love Itoda Bv " Cal- and this with a minimum. number 1 . wur- American city, schools, electronics, ana manufacture oi community pom tne training
reath, and a
Short'nln' Bread.'
omoanied bv Miss
a at the piano. Her numbers needed working over; some bipit to-you a nyporneueai case of what development.
:.;:..y.r: p. r it I
i ' J ill ',; V 1
BV-: . ..it...- . - v.- . -; ,":"-;';mr:ww. -.
! t " f f- . tr -
W' 1
enuwes asa mioxis
One of these days when peace comes you'll be buying nylons and automobiles again: And you'll get them thanks to a lump of coal. Because coal brings you many things besides heat for your home. Coal also makes nylons. Its '.'aromatic mole cule'! produces perfumes: Its coal-tars create brilliant dyes. It helps make iron and steel for automobiles; bridges and children's toys; Coal makes pay envelopes fatter, too. It pro- ' - duces 70 per cent of the industrial power that
helps workers produce more and earn more. On the Illinois Central; nearly every
third ton of freight is coal. It's a service
I you don t have to think about because ?. -1 4.1 i: r
il s always uieie, w urging ior you, day and night;
Moving coal is one of . '"-
many services the American -: ., people rely on railroads to perform.
Railroads provide the low cost delivery
service vital to American mass praduction. After Victory, the Illinois Central looks forward to providing -finer transportation service, thanks to new materials, improved methods and knowledge gained in wartime operations.
v f 1 '
y. f.;
D & -E. D W fl S EWD'flE
Negro folk song,, of teachers. Finances hold it this ten', years irom today, must pre- symneuc .proauexs. cur n snouio wvuuu auu .uie proving ground
' She was nc- way with a low tax of 75c for the sen; eaucauon tor ail American, noi oe exunea ax me exuense oi.i mucuSui) euueauon.
Mvra Laueh- school fund, He said many schools youtn. ao, l would iiKe to descnoe, civic, preparatory; ana personal v. umumite vui dc provioect
an aiuviKuvs, inow wg are taiji-
.
a"-'
