Indianapolis Times, Volume 42, Number 303, Indianapolis, Marion County, 29 April 1931 — Page 2
PAGE 2
SCHOOLS WILL BE OPENED FOR SUMMER WORK Tuition Fees to Be Required for Expense of Running Vacation Classes. Arrangements for a summer vacation school were under way today as a result of the action of 'he board ot school commissioners Tuesday night in adopting a resolution providing for such schools and specifying that expenses be met by tuition tees. Although it'had been hoped that tuition in this year's school would be free, action of the 1931 legislature in limiting the school budget for the next two years to its present maximum has made this impossible, board Tncmbers pointed Qllt. Low bid of 2 T s ]*•: cent and a premium of $16.75 made by the Fletcher American National bank , for a $200,000 temporary loan was ■ accepted by the board. The commissioners approved trans- ! ter of $3,615 in three funds asked by A. B. Good, business director, and accepted the resignation of F. Fielding Bowler, music and English teacher in School 37. Petition presented by Bernard Korblcy and others, asking that one of the new schools be named in honor of the late Miss Georgia Alexander, nationally known pedagog, whose texts are in use in the east, and who devoted her life to Indianapolis schools and children, was taken under advisement by the board. As usual, the commissioners met In closed conference in the business director’s office before going up to the board room.
Chicago Society Girl Is Won in Swift Romance
Alicia Patterson in flying togs '/."</ I nitl il Press TOKIO, Japan. April 29.—The •engagement of Miss Alicia Patter- , ison, daughter of the publisher of ’the Chicago Tribune, and Peter : Grimm, a business man of Shanghai, was reported on ffbod auJ thority. Miss Patetrson, who has 1 been on a hunting expedition in the Itfar now is in Tokio. The engagement climaxed a swift romance which began on board a ship en route from Saigon, French Indo-China, to Shanghai. Grimm was reported en route here, where the wedding will take place. Legion Post to Elect Chiefs Election of officers of the newly organized Garfield post 88 of the I .American Legion will be held Saturday night at 8. State and district officials of the national organization will participate in instalaltion of | the officers Tuesday at Garfield ‘ park.
! LAMONT WARNS BUSINESS HEADS ON WAGE CUTS Speech to C. of C. Taken as Hoover Opposition to Slashing. By United Press ATLANTIC CITY. N. J.. April 29 —Secretary of Commerce Robert P. Lamont brought to the United States Chamber of Commerce convention here today what was interpreted generally as an administration warning against wage cuts as a means of recovery from the business depression. Lamont did not mention specifically the controversy over the wage reduction theory, which has become heated, but he said pointedly that the most prosperous periods of our industrial history have been those coincident with high wages and shorter hours. He referred to the retaliation of I labor against wage cuts in previous | depressions through strikes and disorders. Discussing the course of former depressions he said sig- ! nificantly: “Employers immediately discharged hundreds of thousands of work- | ers and ruthlessly slashed wages at the first signs of trouble, and labor j responded by engaging in the most ! bitter and destructive strikes, inj volving destruction of property, riots and bloodshed.’’ Lament's lengthy message, studied carefully in Washington by Mr. Hoover and thus given added significance, was delivered to 3,000 ! representatives of American business, who have come here to canvass the economic situation thoroughly and seek some way out. The commerce secretary, himself 1 a business man of wide experience,
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| did not seek to minimize the economic slump, which he characterized as “one of the most severe depressions of our business history." but he sought to assuage alarm over unemployment, said it would disappear with the return of normal business and told the business and industrial leaders frankly that they must work out their own salvation by controlling the forces which bring on depressions. Lamont's address followed the opening speech to the convention by President William Butterworth, who appealed to those present for frank 1 and courageous consideration of present economic ills. Business, he declared, must accept 1 the leadership which the public ex--1 pects of it at this time. He opened i the door for corrective proposals by saying that the Chamber of Commerce “is not afraid or new ideas." Butterworth was optimistic of ail upturn in business, saying “we have reached the point when improvements are appearing in the news of the hour.” Lamont, likewise, expressed confidence in a gradual recovery and he defended the administration's course during the depression. The commerce secretary, discussing unemployment, explained that business now is about 25 to 30 per cent below’ normal, w’hile there is 10 per cent unemployment. NOTED FLIER ‘TOO BUSY’ By United Peers JERSEY CITY, N. J., April 29. Mrs. Clarence Chamberlin, wedded for a dozen years or moer to a famous pilot, finally has decided to take flying lessons, but not from her husband. Mrs. Chamberlin has been taking instructions from Herbert Sherman, former army pilot and now an instructor at the Jersey City airport. Chamberlin, his wife said, is too busy running his airplane factory and preparing Ruth Nichols’ monoplane for its coming trans-AtlanMc flight to devote much time to teaching- his w’ife all about ailerons and flippers.
SWEDISH FLIER RACES DEATH Soars Into Arctic to Save Stranded Briton. By United Press MALMOE. Sweden, April 29Captain Albin E. Ahrenberg, noted Swedish flier, started today for Greenland, on a rescue mission on behalf of a British • explorer marooned on the ice cap in the interior of the Arctic island. Augustine Courtauld, son of the British silk millionaire, has been isolated all winter in a meteorological hut on the ice cap, and was feared to be in desperate plight and in danger of starvation. A relief expedition has been unable to find him. Courtauld is a member of the H. G. Watkins British Arctic air route expedition to Greenland. He was left in his lonely observation post at a considerable distance firom the expedition's base, with provisions enough to last the winter. The expedition’s airplanes are out of commission and a dog-si'ed search party was unable to reach Courtauld over the ice
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