Indianapolis Times, Volume 42, Number 238, Indianapolis, Marion County, 12 February 1931 — Page 16
PAGE 16
HOPE OF WORLD FOR PROSPERITY PINNED ON U. S. Nations Realize That Their Industrial Fates Are Interwoven. (Continued from Page 1) of the world, her duty seems clear. The International Chamber of Commerce, its council, composed of picked business executives from twenty-eight different countries, meeting in Paris, formally urged the necessity of international co-opera-tion to safeguard peaeft, readjust the common economic machinery, ?nd put an end to the universal fear and uncertainty now paralyzing trade. One Way to Prosperity This body is not composed of loose-thinking theorists, but of hard-boiled, two-flsted captains of industry, who know the value of a dollar down to the last red cent. Nor was their resolution a hit-or-miss guess at a remedy. On the contrary, it was the studied expression of a conviction based on realities that here is the one-way road to lasting peace, prosperity and profits. That something is wrong with our system everybody admits. Because of it, says the Petit Parisicn, voicing the thought of all Europe, “the shadow of Bolshevism falls upon the world, and a remedy must be found. Who will tackle the job?’’ “The situation is intolerable and one foreign to our ideals,” says Colonel Arthur Woods, chairman of President Hoover’s committee to relieve unemployment, speaking of conditions in America. Other Causes Found But American prosperity does not depend solely upon conditions in pur own country. The origins of our depression, the President declares, “lie to some extent within our own borders,” but “other deepseated causes have been in action.” A remedy, to be effective, therefore, necessarily must get at the teat of trouble, which is the busi-ness-paralyzing unrest which now holds the whole world in its grip. "All of us must prosper together,” says Henry Ford, speaking of the family of nations, “else none of us will prosper very much.” Business leaders and statesmen abroad say the same thing and in common accord look to America—the greatest, richest, most powerful, most up-to-date and most influential of them all—to show the way. Next—The world face In face wilh chaos. DUNCAN IS PRESIDENT Associated Employers Elect 1931 Officers at Annual Session. Associated Employers of Indianapolis elected J. Duane Dungan president at the annual directors’ meeting in the Severin Wednesday night. George P. Torrence and Marshall D. Lupton were elected vice-presi-dents and J. Edward Stilz treasurer. Andrew J. Allen, permanent secretary for twenty-eight years, was renamed. McLagen to Marry £;/ United Press HOLLYWOOD, Feb. 12.—Arthur Robert McLagen, 42, brother of Viclor McLagen, screen star, and one of eight brothers who gained fame in the World war. will be married next Monday to Marian Lord, 36, actress.
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KOCHANSKI HAS TWO FAMOUS VIOLINS Polish Artist Will Appear in Recital at Caleb Mills Hall on Next Monday Night. PAUL KOCHANSKI, Polish violinist who will be heard in recital on Monday night, Feb. 16, at Caleb Mills hall, is the owner of two famous violins. One is known as the “Spanish Strad” and was made by Stradivarius especially for the Spanish crown. It dates back to 1687 and was a part of the royal possessions until it was stolen in the early eighteenth century. Lost for almost 100 years, it came eventually into the hands of Ole Bull, Kmous Scandinavian violinist, who brought it to his country with him. It was this Spanish Strad that inspired a poem by Longfellow’. After Ole Bull's death it passed into the hands of an eminent Eng-
lish collector, C. Oldman. By virtue of a bequest in the latter s will, it was transferred to the British museum where it remained for two years, untouched and unplayed. But the protests of many great violinists, including Ysaye, Arbos, Wilhelmj and others against so valuable an instrument being withdrawn from the musical world and left to become worm-eaten and cracked, resulted in its return to Sarah Bull, widow of the violinist, who placed it with Hill of London for safekeeping. Occasionally it was loaned to a famous violinist for his London recitals. And that was how Kochanski became acquainted with it. It was given to him for his London recital and he was so impressed with its beauty of tone that he at once opened negotiations. Not content with one great instrument, Kochanski recently purchased another at a cost of $40,000 a Guarnerius, said to be one of the finest examples of the work of the famous instrument maker—Joseph del Gesu Guarnerius. It formerly belonged to a well known English family of the nobility. It had been treasured by this family for nearly a century, but had not been played upon during that entire time, nor shown to any one. On the death of the head of the family, it was acquired by Hill of London. When Kochanski was last in London, it was brought out for him to examine, and although the great violinist already had one wonderful instrument, he could not resist the glowing, golden tone of this other. So now he has two of the fiaest instruments in the world as a medium for his genius and plays first one
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
U. S. EMBASSY IMPORTS BIG UWIORSUPPLY Two and One-Half Tons of Wines, Whiskies Sent to Havana. WASHINGTON, Feb. 12.—Two and one-half tons of wines, whis-
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kies and liquors were imported from France recently by the United States embassy in Havana, according to an rrticle today in the Baltimore Sun. The story says the shipment weighed 5,632 pounds, was consigned from Bordeaux to “the ambassador of the United States of America" at Havana. The ambassador is Harry F. Guggenheim. The liquor, according to the Sun s story, was imported duty free under the ambassador’s privilege. Included in the consignment, according to the Sun, were fifty-seven cases of wine, eleven cases of champagne, one case of champagne and syrup, nine cases of whines or
liqueurs, five cases of whisky, and fourteen cases of liqueurs. The article said that while Secretary of State Hughes, eight years ago, ruled that American diplomats abroad might drink without defying the Constitution, there might be some question as to the right of an ambassador to import liquor, since the embassy is United States property and “sovereign territory of the United States.” The state department today said
A THREE DAYS’ COUGH IS YOUR DANGER SIGNAL
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that no cognizance was being taken of the matter; that no law had been violated and that the department was unaware of the incident.
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FEB. 12, 1931
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