Indianapolis Times, Volume 43, Number 172, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 November 1931 — Page 10

PAGE 10

TEACHERS WILL FIGHT TO WIPE OUT ILLITERACY State Sponsoring Plan for Free Instruction Through Township Schools. Anew plan whereby teachers in township schools will instruct Illiterates of all ages in an attempt to wipe hut illiteracy in Indiana, is being worked out in the office of George C. Cole, superintendent of public Instruction. First report on the plan was made today by Grover C. Van Duyn, assistant superintendent, in charge of the fight against illiteracy. Van Duyn declared the present move to cut teachers’ salaries is hot sound from either economic or rd tlonal standpoints, but he did believe teachers could put in more time on such work as stamping out Illiteracy. "There is no reason why any person in Indiana should not be t3light to read and write, regardless of their age,” Van Duyn declared. "We are having a state-wide meeting Dec. 19 of various groups interested in stamping out the stigma of illiteracy.” Statistics compiled by the national committee were discussed at a state committee meeting earlier in the week. Tney disclose there are 43,721 persons in the state, over 10, who can not read or write. Os this number, 22,510 are native born, white; 13,536 foreign born, white; 5,605 Negroes and 2,070 other colored races. Lake county has the* largest unmber, 10,195, and Marion county is second with 4,076.

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Kick That Gave Blue 3-0 Victory Over Harvard Is Newsreel Shot. Albie Booth, Yale’s mighty back field ace in his last appearance against the Harvard Johnnies, booting a field goal that gives his eleven the first victory over their ancient rival in four years at Cambridge, Mass., is one of the leading features of this issue of The Indianapolis Times-Universal Newsreel now being exhibited at leading local theaters. After Jack Crickard’s eight-seven-yard run which almost gave Harvard a touchdown and another victory, the Blue smothers the Crimson air attack and finally Booth comes through in the quarter to give victory to the New Haven Forget the humdrum world! Plunge into the heart of the dangerous jungles where the countless treasure of Opar lies hidden, and follow TARZAN of the Apes on the most breath-taking adventures. $2.00 The New Book by EDGAR RICE BURROUGHS Published by Edgar Rice Burroughs, Inc Tarzana, California

eleven. Yale’s supporters express their glee by ripping up the Harvard goal posts. New York's Chinatown rising in a protest against Japan’s Manchurian activities is another unit of the reel. While the police watch carefully the actions of the adult population, the younger generation escapes attention because they are more interested in the outcome of major college football contests, the pictures show, than the problems besetting their parents. Paris, France, celebrating Armistice day, with a parade of crack military units under the Arch of Triumph and reviewed by President Doumer and Premier Laval is another item of interest in the reel.

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

CUTHBERTSON FACES CENSURE FUR TRUCK ACT Abrupt Dismissal of Case May Draw Rebuke From Colleagues. Commissioner Harry K. Cuthbertson’s arbupt dismissal of the Store Door Delivery, Inc., truck line petition may bring about censure from his colleagues at the public service commission conference this afternoon. Never, in the history of the commission, has a single commissioner taken it upon himself to dismiss a

petition in the midst of a hearing, one commissioner pointed out. Such dismissal must be by vote of the commission, the hearing commissioner writing an order to be accepted or rejected. Cuthertson, who was in charge of the case, dismissed the petitions at the second day of the hearing when evidence disclosed petitioners were operating thirty-six lines, only twelve of which had been granted commission certification. Cuthbertson today prepared a motion to institute commission investigation of the conduct of Tom Snyder and the Central Union Truck Terminal and Warehouse Company. He expects to show truck lines and the warehouse here are operating as common carriers without commission consent. Snyder and Charles S. Raugh

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were officers of the Store Door Delivery, Inc., which presented the petitions dismissed by Cuthbertson. It was Snyder’s testimony regarding the truck lines he now operates as so-called "contract haulers,” which aroused the commissioner's ire. Among the important orders to be considered by the commission today

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are the North Manchester public ownership petition and the Indianapolis Street Railway Company labor arbitration. Both cases ar. in charge of Commissioner Frank Singleton. The North Manchester ruling will be on a motion of the Insull interests to dismiss the petition of the town of

.NOV. 27, 1931

North Manchester to buy the Insull electric lines in the town and operate them as a municipal plant The street railway company has a motion to cut out most of the important things in the workers’ petition, such as an eight-hour day, union recognition and collective bargaining. '