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# GNU Typist - improved typing tutor program for UNIX systems
# Copyright (C) 1998 Simon Baldwin ([email protected])
#
# This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
# it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
# the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
# (at your option) any later version.
#
# This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
# but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
# MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
# GNU General Public License for more details.
#
# You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
# along with this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
#
#------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Series M
#------------------------------------------------------------------------------
G:_M_MENU
*:_M_NO_MENU
#------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Lesson M1
#------------------------------------------------------------------------------
*:M1
*:_M_S_M1
B: Lesson M1
I:(1) Warming-Up Drill
*:_M_R_L0
D:If you can do so, will you kindly let us know by return mail.
I:(2) Continuous Copy
*:_M_R_L1
D:My totals were: $2,309, $5,687, $3,498, $2,408, and $3,697.
I:(3)
*:_M_R_L2
D:A student may type 1 word per minute faster for each added
:year of age: i.e., 13 to 14, to 15, to 16, to 17, to 18.
I:(4)
*:_M_R_L3
D:Often 25% of first-year students never do 25 words a minute.
:Many second-year students can type about 45 words a minute.
:More than 50% do not equal the practical rate of 50 words.
I:(5)
*:_M_R_L4
D:Why do we all thrill over sports? Maybe it is the tireless
:skill of the winner that we feel. Ask the players. They
:may agree (Rice,* famous as a sports writer, said the cham-
:pions all agreed) that skill is only part (50%) of it.
I:(6)
*:_M_R_L5
D:"When you step on the first tee," says the four-time gold
:champion, Bobby Jones, "you know you can't afford to make
:one careless slip." A tired Bobby Jones (this was the way
:Bobby told it to Rice) has stood on the 16th tee, leading
:Smith by 18 strokes.
I:(7)
*:_M_R_L6
D:"Up to this point," says Bobby, "I had played 33 holes in 11
:under par. I believe it was the best golf I ever played in
:my life. But after easing up on the mental side I played
:the last three holes in 5 over par."
I:(8)
*:_M_R_L7
D:In 1919 Babe Ruth shot into the records with 29 home runs.
:Yet few know that the Babe worked five years in big games
:before this start that led past Home Run #600. You may
:have cheered Jimmy Foxx and many another. Yet you can still
:picture the Babe after two strikes, smashing to the very
:spot he had "called" a famous home run.
I:(9)
*:_M_R_L8
D:It is the effort against odds that thrills. We feel these
:drives that never let down. We feel (this was the way Rice
:put it) the champion forces himself into the winning frame of
:mind. Can the fast typist afford to do less? A typist has
:to face such days of "mental torture" too. Some days he has
:to force himself along. He need not punish his machine. He
:must pull himself together (100%) to type his steady, smooth
:way over all upsets.
I:(9A) Pointed Paragraph (m b)
*:_M_R_L9
S:Men are bound to believe that business is bad in winter
:months. Maybe Mr. Smith remembers that most building became
:better in September but both November and December seemed to
:be much behind. Monday morning my mail box became blocked
:by urgent requests of many families that small-sized homes
:be built. Some jobs may begin to come now from the Chamber
:of Commerce members.
I:(10) Rhythmic Review
*:_M_R_L10
D:I said, "Never promise to take much money to such places."
G:_M_E_M1
#------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Lesson M2
#------------------------------------------------------------------------------
*:M2
*:_M_S_M2
B: Lesson M2
I:(1) Warming-Up Drill
*:_M_R_L11
D:How do I lose if I read a book that doesn't have much in it?
I:(2) Balanced Keyboard Drill
*:_M_R_L12
D:non ana dis dia cle pan ard pur ern eer off age suf ame amb
:ess ean ist ian cel apo col ary tra neo sur ity sub ele mis
I:(3) Four-letter words (a to d)
*:_M_R_L13
S:Dear Dan,
:
:Yes, I came out of the corn, back to the city, both to
:draw and to do copy on the new cars. To date I am able to
:put cash in the bank and bear a bill or two. The new deed
:has done it.
:
:The city has been busy but cold for two days. Dear baby
:has been to see her best aunt. A band came by the door.
:Baby let the bird cage drop down with a blow. The bird died.
:Boys put its dead body deep in a dark card case. Baby also
:has a ball and blue book to drop. I put the boat away. Its
:deck did burn, but I care not as it does not cost a cent.
:
:Come, call on me at the club.
:
:Yours sincerely,
I:(4) Four-letter words (e to g)
*:_M_R_L14
S:Dear Bea,
:
:I am glad you feel so for the farm in the East. Even
:as a girl of four or five I was ever so glad to find the
:farm. In my eyes it was all as good as gold. Even my feet
:felt good. A girl can gain and grow fast on farm food and
:the fine free air. Why else did face and form grow full
:and fair so fast?
:
:On each foot of my farm I felt free from fear. It
:gave me my fill of fun. I felt no fear of any fire in the
:fall. Now the fire is a fact and my farm is gone. Give me
:my full life, etc. The game goes on.
:
:Yours sincerely,
I:(5) Four-letter words (h to l)
*:_M_R_L15
S:Dear Hal,
:
:Just a line to say I am lost if I cannot fly. I
:have to keep on here. I knew it was but a hope last May.
:It was just my last idea in June. Yet I held my head high
:and did not lose hope.
:
:Why not fly up in the air a half hour or less and
:look at my lake and our home on the hill? I left it late
:last July with one item on my list. Bill gave me half an
:hour of help. Like the lady of the lake I met the king.
:Bill was a kind king, too.
:
:To lead off into the air and see all our lake so
:long and lots of land so low, was to live a high hour. I
:kept my hand at my ear so as to help hear. In the air my
:hair was a loss. It did not kill me. I have to fly to know
:life can be less hard. I like to hold on and help Bill. I
:love to fly.
:
:Yours sincerely,
G:_M_E_M2
#------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Lesson M3
#------------------------------------------------------------------------------
*:M3
*:_M_S_M3
B: Lesson M3
I:(1) Warming-Up Drill
*:_M_R_L16
D:He says he hasn't been very blue once in his two weeks here.
I:(2) Balanced Keyboard Drill
*:_M_R_L17
D:sus ase sis uni suc epi cor ory tri acy fic ify dom isk ism
:ante than ance ling para less plea lent leas post rece cata
I:(3) Four-letter words (m to p)
*:_M_R_L18
S:Dear "Pie,"
:
:I open most of my mail and meet the news. I note that
:you say Mrs. Page is a mere name but you met the Miss Page.
:
:You must need the car. Once the pass is open I can move
:the car over to you. Do you mind if I make it part of a nice
:plan to meet Miss Page, too? Mrs. Page was only a mile past
:us. Her son was my age and I made the mile at noon to play a
:bit. She paid us for milk. She did not mean much to me, but
:her son did.
:
:Next we had more fun up the pass near the poor old No.
:Nine mine. I can mark many a mile we once ran. I must mail
:this note or I may miss the post.
:
:Yours sincerely,
I:(4) Four-letter words (r to s)
*:_M_R_L19
S:Dear Ross,
:
:It is a real rain. The road is so soft my car can but
:roll, stop, and roll on. Are you on the ship? If I get as
:far as the ship, can we sail in such a rain? If we try to
:sail, the ship is sure to rock or ride on one side. If I get
:sick, it is up to you to stay by and show us how to save the
:ship. Ann has some sort of song to sing in the rain. She
:said she sent it to you.
:
:Did you read of our sale? We set out a big sign. Now
:any sort of suit and any size seem to sell. We are not rich
:but we can soon step out or be sold out, if any such rate is
:to rule.
:
:Ann has not seen the ship as yet. Rain or no rain, Ann
:says to send her out. All the rest of us say the same. Can
:you ring me in my room at the shop?
:
:Yours sincerely,
I:(5) Pointed Paragraph (i u)
*:_M_R_L20
S:The public is quite unfair about airing quibbles over
:house furniture and fruit juices for the university crew.
:The alumni inquiry into the failure of equipment figures in
:the issue. The alumni attitude is useful but continues to
:put a premium on a victorious crew. Only genius can guide
:this outfit uphill and build a suitable crew that won't quit.
I:(6) Pointed Paragraph (d s -)
*:_M_R_L21
S:Students should be assisted in studying seated at their
:desks; cross-questioned as to their needs and desires; ad-
:vised to use up-to-date leads based on studies of standards.
:By-products of student days, well-bred friends, kindness,
:self-help, with good grades and degrees, are listed as far-
:sighted aids. In Dad's old-fashioned address to his co-
:workers, he said sadly that ideas are missed less than first-
:class friends and good-natured wishers.
G:_M_E_M3
#------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Lesson M4
#------------------------------------------------------------------------------
*:M4
*:_M_S_M4
B: Lesson M4
I:(1) Warming-Up Drill
*:_M_R_L22
D:Get any piece, since I can't guess the color he always used.
I:(2) Balanced Keyboard Drill
*:_M_R_L23
D:anti thin atic fast hypo ness your ther fore ship cial ible
:ette hter here mber ough over eive with ived just ever mono
I:(3) Four-letter words (t to z)
*:_M_R_L24
S:Dear Tris,
:
:It is so very warm at this time of year, I told my wife
:that you and I wish to go west for a week or two. Did I
:tell you what a wind we had? I went to town to vote for the
:one man whom I want. I took a well-used tire. When it went
:down on a bad turn, in the woods, I had to walk. Then the
:wind more than set in, and I had to wait by a wall. It got
:our old tree.
:
:I saw two men and set them to work on the car, till
:they told me it was no use. If I were to turn it in, is it
:true that you can take your car? I want a wide view and I
:want to talk with you. Thus I wait upon your word. Wire
:yes if you will take this trip.
:
:Yours sincerely,
I:(4) Five-letter words (a to c)
*:_M_R_L25
S:Dear "Cab,"
:
:Could you apply to the court to allow my claim as agent
:for Mr. Blank? I could bring in his books and see about his
:bills. If asked, he can cover the costs by checks on a bank
:that did not break.
:
:Will you allow your child to come alone to see me? He
:can have every apple he can carry. By the way, being clean
:and above board, you must be above bad cases, but you began
:to bring in off-color cases after April.
:
:I agree you do not cross the law, but why let men win
:in a black cause on any basis? Why not build up your cases
:from among men of our own class? Close the awful cases you
:now carry along to court, and begin again.
:
:Sincerely yours,
I:(5) Pointed Paragraph (r t)
*:_M_R_L26
S:In our motor party on the return trip an attractive
:quartet first tried to tell thirty or forty short travel
:stories. By turns they transferred to the theater, to art
:matters, to court trial stories. In the latter a certain
:doctor is hurt by a first truck, another truck is struck,
:and three contractors are thrown to the street. The girl's
:strong brother has been hurt. Further, there are arrests
:and the sort of extra details that enter into true stories.
G:_M_E_M4
#------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Lesson M5
#------------------------------------------------------------------------------
*:M5
*:_M_S_M5
B: Lesson M5
I:(1) Warming-Up Drill
*:_M_R_L27
D:Some women who could write her won't raise a hand to help.
I:(2) Balanced Keyboard Drill
*:_M_R_L28
D:teen arch acle ward ence ency ease ster tele trix wise some
:atte tter tion fold ount ancy auto ttle cule mony cion come
I:(3) Five-letter words (d to h)
*:_M_R_L29
S:Dear Fred,
:
:I have dared to ask you for an extra favor on the first.
:If you are not dated, I am to draft you to drive me by horse
:or car up the grade to the field house at eight. I guess you
:have not heard fully about the great dance to be given by the
:girls on the floor of the field house.
:
:My hands have put fresh green goods on the walls. Every
:girl has a green dress, on its front a funny glass heart that
:she gives as a favor. The old folks can drive up early, eat
:and drink and enjoy it all. We will delay the dance till the
:girls enter in a dozen files. It would crush me to death if
:an error were found in the plans. Happy hours on earth are
:never heavy. Can you doubt that you are going?
:
:Sincerely yours,
I:(4) Five-letter words (i to p)
*:_M_R_L30
S:Dear Madam,
:
:I have your two later notes of March 1. Maybe it is a
:large order for you to leave for the north in the month of
:March.
:
:Our place is miles away, but the real issue is that mu-
:sic means much to us. A night of music, even one piece of
:music, has often meant more to me than my local paper and all
:the power I have known. If I can plant a love of music in all
:parts of this place so that all who hear you sing can learn to
:love it, it will mean more to me than money.
:
:I never laugh at money, but isn't it plain in these
:lines that price ought to be the least of all the items? The
:point is that our plans for your party are more important. If
:you read our other offer in the light of our love for music,
:we might not seem so far away.
:
:Yours sincerely,
I:(5) Pointed Paragraph (u y)
*:_M_R_L31
S:If truly quoted, you and Guy, mere youths, fly a con-
:tinuous journey of thousands of miles yearly in your study
:of numerous flying routes. You say you were south in July
:in the dry country conspicuous for yucca, but now you are
:busy buying a quota of various useful items to supply your
:outfit for the famous Yukon. Yet I am suspicious when you
:say this unusual survey is monotonous rather than glorious.
:You should hurry surely to Vancouver for some delicious
:yuletide fare. It seems only yesterday that I was conscious
:of being young and vigorous enough to fly my buoyant plane.
:If you lucky boys are victorious over any unusually furious,
:dangerous, or anxious double duty on this survey, write a
:quotable account yourself for the Journal.
G:_M_E_M5
#------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Lesson M6
#------------------------------------------------------------------------------
*:M6
*:_M_S_M6
B: Lesson M6
I:(1) Warming-Up Drill
*:_M_R_L32
D:They were often too tired to be certain they heard the hour.
I:(2) Balanced Keyboard Drill
*:_M_R_L33
D:hood ight sion full ould able like ment ical tial ambi semi
:hand part king itio hing tory ding enti ting thou ving very
I:(3) Five-letter words (q to s)
*:_M_R_L34
S:Dear Alice,
:
:I shall start my river story since you have shown you like
:my style.
:
:The scene is a state in the South. A sweet girl speaks of
:the sound and sight of the river. Seven men without shame raise
:the stock sales and the boy tries to spend too much at the store.
:In order to make a quiet and quick slide down the river, the men
:seize the boat while the others, who are quite ready to serve the
:girl, sleep.
:
:It seems the girl has sense, for on a sheet of paper she
:writes that her stock of gold is within reach from a round stone
:under the small shade tree. She does not quote the boy, but does
:refer to the sorry end of his short study, and in her reply to his
:folks she will state how the gold may still be spent in the right
:way, which will stamp the story as real.
:
:Yours sincerely,
I:(4) Five-letter words (t to z)
*:_M_R_L35
S:Dear Mrs. White,
:
:I wish to thank you for the words you wrote three weeks ago,
:and I trust you will write again on the wrong and waste of war.
:
:As I watch the wheels of events today, I think you value a
:thing it has taken me a third of my years to see. In its total
:trade the world is one whole, and each part in touch with the
:other at most times.
:
:The usual farm woman won't see a trade table or understand
:its terms, for she is tired with her efforts to train and teach
:her young. She has tried to throw her value into her home, which
:to her is worth so much. War can not be put under until these
:women see there is but one world, which truly is their world.
:
:Where will you be while the thick wheat is harvested? If
:not across the water, would you visit us, using your voice to
:teach us these things?
:
:Yours sincerely,
I:(5) Pointed Paragraph (n m)
*:_M_R_L36
S:Important dinner company in our small apartment was
:not common, and November ninth mamma was solemn in manner.
:The moment nine American gentlemen were announced, fun and
:argument began. I remember one ancient gentleman, manager
:of much more income than mine, who was not solemn as imag-
:ined, but funny and human, even if normal demand, planned
:movements of modern machines to Canada, long term payments,
:and columns of numbers meant much more to him than to me.
G:_M_E_M6
#------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Lesson M7
#------------------------------------------------------------------------------
*:M7
*:_M_S_M7
B: Lesson M7
I:(1) Warming-Up Drill
*:_M_R_L37
D:Though I don't seem to hear the doctor, I know he is early.
I:(2) Balanced Keyboard Drill
*:_M_R_L38
D:stat each ning ieve ring side nder emen turn embe llow ours
I:(3) Continuous Copy
*:_M_R_L39
S:Dear Mr. and Mrs. Blank,
:
:Your son has not called on me. If he is to become almost an
:annual charge upon the county, the church will answer with action.
:Yet, I am afraid his arrest can not assure his coming around and
:asking us for advice. Of course he has to appear before August.
:He bought on credit, got behind in cash, and the amount became too
:big. I shall pay it.
:
:You are an old couple, and I advise you to accept this. Any-
:way, he is not a common boy and must have a chance. He always does
:appear to anyone as fit. I run across copies of his art. I can
:advise your son, attend to his credit, and try to help him arrive
:at a change for the better.
:
:Sincerely yours,
I:(4) Six-letter words (d to k)
*:_M_R_L40
S:Dear Dick
:
:I have a dollar. I expect you to follow me and take dinner.
:Friday I didn't have cash, but a friend of the family had enough
:for both of us.
:
:Father is having all the lot, except the garden, filled in
:during the week. Giving in to his desire, I intend to work the
:ground. Doctor says that my health is hardly an excuse, so I had
:better decide to make an effort. Indeed, I am driven either to
:finish the work in the near future or pay to have it done.
:
:I am hoping you will happen upon some kindly fellow to whom
:a flower garden itself is fun, and inform me. I shall direct him,
:as the entire effect will lie in the way we handle the ground
:plan. Don't forget.
:
:Yours sincerely,
I:(5) Pointed Paragraph (q z)
*:_M_R_L41
S:I quit the quiz when I saw the quantity of queer hazy
:questions. To seize lesser prizes required answers to a
:dozen queries. Only a quarter of the quotas qualified with
:zest. Many had zero when the quiz asked: In what zones are
:Brazil, Switzerland, Arizona, or Texas? Zebras in our zoos
:grow to what sizes? Analyze and quote one great citizen's
:query as to zeppelins. Criticize the quality of jazz music.
G:_M_E_M7
#------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Lesson M8
#------------------------------------------------------------------------------
*:M8
*:_M_S_M8
B: Lesson M8
I:(1) Warming-Up Drill
*:_M_R_L42
D:At the last minute he wrote that he knew it was done again.
I:(2) Balanced Keyboard Drill
*:_M_R_L43
D:trans ition there lease craft hyper etter esque ceive where
I:(3) Six-letter words (l to r)
*:_M_R_L44
S:Dear Rollin,
:
:I did notice a number of the pretty places I passed in
:the air nearly two months ago, and I can at length locate
:the best. If prices remain rather low, I will not return
:for any person or be prompt at orders. I can play a record
:or two, and not regret there is no report to be looked at.
:I want to be myself and regard nature, not people.
:
:To obtain this latter result is the proper reason for
:making this quiet trip. So far from the public, matter in
:the papers will be old and market policy of little moment.
:It will please me to have you with us longer than the others.
:I was really living for the period when I would be placed with
:you both. Your mother has a lovely manner. I am glad to
:oblige so recent a member of our office, too.
:
:This letter is being mailed Monday, and in two days we
:shall go.
:
:Yours sincerely,
I:(4) Six-letter words (s to z)
*:_M_R_L45
S:Dear Sylvia,
:
:I wonder if my sister talked to you on Sunday of the
:thirty things we wanted to do this summer? We were trying
:all the spring season at school to secure a supply of sim-
:ple but strong materials for a camp in the valley.
:
:It struck me as we were taking a walk down the street
:that we would surely be unable to do as we stated unless you
:took a sudden notion to help. It seemed to me on second
:thought we should give thanks to you for giving tongue to our
:wishes last winter, for you turned the folks in our favor.
:
:My sister was saying that girls from twenty states had
:signed our pledge, so we are united. Though this is off the
:subject, I saw a pretty yellow and silver dress within a win-
:dow on Main Street toward our corner. Would you think it
:suitable for the writer?
:
:Sincerely yours,
I:(5) Pointed Paragraph (a q)
*:_M_R_L45A
#
S:I acquired a bequest from a quizzical Quaker. How
:to apply it was a quandary. As a quasi artist, I began in
:Albuquerque to make a quantity of plaques of chance Indian
:acquaintances. My masquerade as an artist of quality in
:that quaint land of quite Spanish art and adobe was adequate
:and equally unique. Squeezed in quiet, antiquated adobe
:quarters, I began quickly and without qualms to qualify as
:an artist. After quarrels and questions over my queer tech-
:niques, I acquired my quota of opaque plaques.
G:_M_E_M8
#------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Lesson M9
#------------------------------------------------------------------------------
*:M9
*:_M_S_M9
B: Lesson M9
I:(1) Warming-Up Drill
*:_M_R_L46
D:Instead of having us tonight he is making ready for Tuesday.
I:(2) Balanced Keyboard Drill
*:_M_R_L47
D:stead ation retro geous contr ourse ultra super ntion under
I:(3) Continuous Copy; Seven-letter words (a-f)
*:_M_R_L48
S:Dear Annabel,
:
:My brother and his college friends in the factory decided to arrange an
:evening exactly as in the old days. After calling us, they arrived and we
:carried out the idea. We used an old college catalog and each girl had an
:old college dress.
:
:Further to advance the evening, my brother advised us of an old address
:near the freight yard where certain college boys brought this or that article
:and were allowed a few dollars. As we went in, an old man came a step farther,
:fell forward and against me. Brother charged him. Will you believe this care-
:ful account I enclose? Between brother and me lay this old man who did seem
:dead. I can't express my feeling. His head was covered with marks of blows.
:
:Already we were anxious to go. Yet his safe was open, as if to furnish us
:the old books with the many expense charges against the college boys. When I
:looked to see who of our company were in them, I read one balance after another
:paid from the old country to My Dearest Son. You are correct if you guess we
:now ran, because we did. What follows? Today's paper doesn't have a line.
:
:Yours sincerely,
I:(4) Seven-letter words (g to o)
*:_M_R_L49
S:Dear Mrs. White,
:
:I have been holding on, but this January I am getting out.
:My wife herself may have told you of our opening. However, I go
:at ten o'clock this morning, and your husband is still out. He is
:to do my general work himself, and may not imagine there is any
:measure of justice in that. We married men are obliged to do as
:ordered.
:
:I am leaving a hundred matters. He has my opinion on each.
:Tell him the minutes of the last meeting of the members are on my
:table. Tell him I haven't an invoice, but have instead an October
:bill, for our new machine parts. He may mention this item to the
:manager, as he has neither its history nor my letters of inquiry.
:
:I find nothing else to include. We shall miss you greatly,
:and we shall be looking for you at our new home.
:
:Yours sincerely,
I:(4) Seven-letter words (p to z)
*:_M_R_L50
S:Dear Patrick,
:
:I realize that this letter I am sending may subject you to some trouble.
:I am writing tonight without waiting to go through various reports on our
:present program. If I had thought that you would be willing to give me an
:extra day, perhaps I would have come myself.
:
:As soon as this letter has reached you, and you have finished reading the
:several items about which I have written, I hope you can give extra working
:time to my request for special records. These items will suggest a new plan as
:I picture it. I shall add them to this note.
:
:It is my purpose to prepare a fast station-to-station service that should
:be in running order soon. I suppose it could be started next month. Let me
:ask, also, whether we could receipt each payment, as we receive it, on a
:regular form similar to those in the package shipped you Tuesday. I am pleased
:with your showing. You have been like a soldier on duty in any and all
:weather. Success is your teacher.
:
:With my best regards,
G:_M_E_M9
#------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Lesson M10
#------------------------------------------------------------------------------
*:M10
*:_M_S_M10
B: Lesson M10
B: Lesson M10
I:(1) Warming-Up Drill
*:_M_R_L51
D:He would separate the whole business and buy out their half.
I:(2) Balanced Keyboard Drill
*:_M_R_L52
D:inter itude circu gious right cious after extra micro sible
I:(3) Continuous Copy; Eight-letter words(a to m)
*:_M_R_L53
S:Dear Thomas,
:
:First, I consider of definite interest anything from
:the business of as good a customer as you. As director of
:our division, I am to continue handling building material.
:My judgment on all the evidence, which I send herewith
:enclosed in a second envelope, is one of complete approval.
:Let me have a contract covering the earliest delivery date.
:Are you advising me what increase in your discount is to be
:expected?
:
:Second, this forenoon I saw your son and he told me of
:his marriage in February. Although you had not entirely
:finished the addition to your lake house by last December,
:couldn't you exchange it, as it is, for my mountain home?
:Your son said that his young wife wants to live on this
:mountain to which all your children seem so attached.
:
:Sincerely yours,
#
I:(4) Eight-letter words (n to z)
*:_M_R_L54
S:Dear Nathan,
:
:My last shipment has probably been received, for the purchase was made
:Thursday. Tomorrow is Saturday, a pleasant day, for I go on my vacation.
:
:Do you remember an original idea you proposed last November relative
:to planning for some shipping from my property? My neighbor recently
:called it a plan in a thousand, and we must get together so that I can
:thank you properly. This is a national as well as personal question,
:and I am trusting that you will be thinking that it is possible for you to
:help put it into practice.
:
:If you can possibly separate yourself from teachers and your
:teaching position sometime soon, plan to get a standard car and
:whatever else is required for the trip. The car would also be a
:pleasure after you return to New York. May I persuade you in re-
:plying to state that you are planning to come promptly? We will
:make you one of the officers of the shipping business.
:
:Yours sincerely,
I:(5) Nine-letter words (a to i)
*:_M_R_L55
S:Dear Son,
:
:I am beginning this afternoon to give my immediate attention
:to a Christmas that should be beautiful. I have addressed, to be
:forwarded and delivered in good condition, some new equipment
:according to your wish. I note, too, that your committee met.
:What these gentlemen said is important and may be a sort of in-
:surance that your plan does not fail. I certainly would not want
:to duplicate for you the kind of education given me.
:
:Be different by following more than one new idea, including
:some of your own. If you can carefully take fair advantage of
:every available condition, everybody should accept you cordially,
:as answering to the character of a gentleman. Mother is enclosing
:a few lines.
:
:Yours sincerely,
G:_M_E_M10
#------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Lesson M11
#------------------------------------------------------------------------------
*:M11
*:_M_S_M11
B: Lesson M11
B: Lesson M11
I:(1) Warming-Up Drill
*:_M_R_L56
D:My country friend is beginning to believe trouble is coming.
I:(2) Balanced Keyboard Drill
*:_M_R_L57
D:thing pleas ought quest ember count ditio state recei ction
I:(3) Nine-letter words (j to z)
*:_M_R_L58
S:Dear Gertrude,
:
:This letter has no reference to shipments which you have
:so kindly purchased from me in the past. Rather, as you are
:returning to this territory by September, our president has re-
:quested me as secretary to ask that you make a statement before
:our club the first Wednesday.
:
:Let me say something of the questions we have been receiving
:for the year. Recently I read that the old principle today still
:applies. It is wonderful what our new knowledge has surprised us
:into regarding as necessary for ourselves--sometimes things not
:even mentioned yesterday.
:
:Will you therefore represent this new deal and present the
:situation to us in principle, sincerely, as you see it? Other-
:wise, if you cannot make this provision now, I shall be glad to
:call upon you later.
:
:Yours sincerely,
I:(4) Ten-letter words (a to z)
*:_M_R_L59
S:Dear Alex,
:
:We are especially interested in the settlement run by a
:new department at the University. We appreciate the importance
:of its additional study to understand impossible conditions in
:the poor parts of our city, and its use for adjustment of some
:particular boy or girl. Have you read our memorandum in this
:connection?
:
:Our city is absolutely too big. With the automobile we can
:distribute every person to his home along a line, our wide road,
:run far out from the city. The difference between country and
:city grows less and less, in accordance with such use of the auto-
:mobile.
:
:Concerning our collection of any remittance from you, this
:would serve to form a Conference which would develop everything
:that can make city governments bring full and rich experience
:to all.
:
:Sincerely yours,
I:(5) Eleven- to fourteen-letter words (a to z)
*:_M_R_L60
S:Dear Sir,
:
:I wish to acknowledge the recent interesting correspondence
:from your office on the very considerable requirements of the new
:law that have to do with any unfortunate advertising that might
:appear in my papers.
:
:Our association also has appreciated both your instructions
:and the opportunity for prompt examination and understanding of
:the new arrangement, particularly its application to all informa-
:tion given the public about merchandise for sale. This has been
:a real convenience in our consideration of the entire proposition.
:
:I want to assure you that our co-operation under the new law
:will be satisfactory in every way.
:
:Yours respectfully,
I:(6) Pointed Paragraph (l r z)
*:_M_R_L61
S:The JOURNAL learned that the relatives on their arrival in
:April had already referred the trouble to lawyers. Their early re-
:turn surprises me. As to the children themselves, the older girls
:are personally agreeable, slender, and certainly full of zest. They
:travel yearly and already are familiar with the world. Their father
:was a quizzical old man who fairly idolized them. His will leaves
:them very nearly a half-million dollars. Only the earlier, first
:will is very irregular. I've already quizzed them about the real
:hazards of quarrels over legal prizes of similar size. From their
:replies I've realized slowly that the girls are all right. It
:really amazes me that even persons like ourselves promptly seize
:upon some hostile relative's version of an earlier will, which
:should be recognized easily as false.
G:_M_E_M11
#------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Lesson series M jump tables
#------------------------------------------------------------------------------
*:_M_E_M1
Q: Do you want to continue to lesson M2 [Y/N] ?
N:_M_MENU
G:_M_S_M2
*:_M_E_M2
Q: Do you want to continue to lesson M3 [Y/N] ?
N:_M_MENU
G:_M_S_M3
*:_M_E_M3
Q: Do you want to continue to lesson M4 [Y/N] ?
N:_M_MENU
G:_M_S_M4
*:_M_E_M4
Q: Do you want to continue to lesson M5 [Y/N] ?
N:_M_MENU
G:_M_S_M5
*:_M_E_M5
Q: Do you want to continue to lesson M6 [Y/N] ?
N:_M_MENU
G:_M_S_M6
*:_M_E_M6
Q: Do you want to continue to lesson M7 [Y/N] ?
N:_M_MENU
G:_M_S_M7
*:_M_E_M7
Q: Do you want to continue to lesson M8 [Y/N] ?
N:_M_MENU
G:_M_S_M8
*:_M_E_M8
Q: Do you want to continue to lesson M9 [Y/N] ?
N:_M_MENU
G:_M_S_M9
*:_M_E_M9
Q: Do you want to continue to lesson M10 [Y/N] ?
N:_M_MENU
G:_M_S_M10
*:_M_E_M10
Q: Do you want to continue to lesson M11 [Y/N] ?
N:_M_MENU
G:_M_S_M11
*:_M_E_M11
G:_M_MENU
#------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Lesson series M menu
#------------------------------------------------------------------------------
*:_M_MENU
B: Typing drills
M: UP=_EXIT "The M series contains the following 11 lessons"
:_M_S_M1 "Lesson M1 Practise"
:_M_S_M2 "Lesson M2 Practise"
:_M_S_M3 "Lesson M3 Practise"
:_M_S_M4 "Lesson M4 Practise"
:_M_S_M5 "Lesson M5 Practise"
:_M_S_M6 "Lesson M6 Practise"
:_M_S_M7 "Lesson M7 Practise"
:_M_S_M8 "Lesson M8 Practise"
:_M_S_M9 "Lesson M9 Practise"
:_M_S_M10 "Lesson M10 Practise"
:_M_S_M11 "Lesson M11 Practise"
*:_M_EXIT
#------------------------------------------------------------------------------