Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 May 1937 — Page 27
PERRY op
FRIDAY, MAY 7, 1937
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Career for Wife of Railroad Head? Certainly, Answers Mrs. Carl R. Gray, Chosen ‘American Mother of 1937’
Golden Rule Foundation’s Selection Says ‘Job’ Serious Business.
Bu NEA Sertice NEW YORK, May 7.—The “Amerfcan Mother of 1937” is a career woman. : She is Mrs. Carl R. Gray of Omaha, Neb., and her career has been that of a wife and mother and a church and community: leader. Named the “American Mother of
1937” by the Golden Rule Foundation in New York, the clear-eyed, gray-haired wife of the Union Pacific Railroad president, was married. when she was 17. “Mr. Gray was only 19 and, at that time, his salary as a telegra-
‘pher was $15 a week,” Mrs. Gray re-
calls. “However, we managed to get along, and to raise three sons. Then, as now, my engagements always came second to my husband's comiort: “Three precepts have guided my life,” Mrs. Gray continued. “They are: Make a home for’ your family; practice the Golden Rule as well as teach it; never swerve from what you believe to be right.” Mrs. Gray's philosophy guided her to success in her chosen career. One son, Carl Jr., is vice president and general manager of the Chica-
"go, St. Paul, Minneapolis & Oma-
ha Railroad. Another, Dr. [Howard D. Gray, is with the Mayo Clinic at Rochester, Minn, The thind, Russel D. of Boston, is a member of the traffic organization staff of the Pennsylvania Railroad. A Their father will retire from the position of president of the Union Pacific next fall, move to New York and become vice chairman of the railroads’ board of directors.
DENVER INDIAN ART EXHIBIT IS PRAISED
By United Press | DENVER, May T.—Denver's Art Museum has the finest collection of Indian art in the. world, according to Abris Silberman, director of the Hungarian-American Chamber "of Commerce and a partner in the Silberman galleries, which have been catering to the royal families of Europe for more than 157 years.
FIVE BROTHERS JOIN
K.OF C. AT SAME TIME |
By I'nited Press LYNN, Mass.,, May 7—The Lynn Knights of Columbus membership has. been enlarged by five—all brothers. Joseph, Edward, William, Eugene and Thomas Casey joined Vallaloid Council, K. of C.—the first time in the order’s history that five brothers have joined the organization at the same time.
HAWAIIAN WORKERS
TO RECEIVE BONUS
By United Press HONOLULU, May 7.—Approximately 45,000 Hawaiian sugar industry employees received bonuses totaling 17 per cent of their earned wages for one month. While bonuses is a regular part of the sugar industry system, the present one was the largest ever granted. :
WEDS SOON AFTER | HE GETS SENTENCE
. By T'nited Press
KITTANNING, Pa, May T.— Russell Edward Crawford, 23, married Blanche Mable Crawford a few minutes after he was sentenced to from one to two years in the workhouse for breaking and entering. The five-day wait for a marriage license. as. required by law was waived on order of the judge.
SQUADS TO PATROL POLLS IN ST. LOUIS
By United Press ST. LOUIS, May 7.—A fleet of cruising deputy election commissioners will replace the former procedure in city elections here of having deputy commissioners stationed permanently in polling places, according to a8 new plan to be inaugurated by the city election
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Mrs. Carl R. Gray (above), “the American Mother of 1937,” happily scanned the high roofs of Manhattan while her railroad-president husband (below) occupies a different national spotlight at a Washington conference with Secretary of Labor Frances Perkins on labor relations.
I. L. Starkey, head of the Welcome By United Press Expendition to the Near East, and JERUSALEM, May 7—Records | decyphered by Prof. H. Torczyner, of a court-martial which took place | jecturer in Hebrew at Jerusalem in Palestine more than 2500 years ' University.
ANCIENT COURT-MARTIAL aso have been discovered by Prof.
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9,725,000 MORE HAVE JOBS NOW THAN MARCH, 33
Unemployment Decreases 2,255,000 Over Same Period in 1936.
By United Press ; NEW YORK, May 7.—Employed persons numbering 9,275,000 more in March this year than at the height of the depression in March, 1933, the National Industrial Conference Board reported today. Unemployment for March was estimated at 7,553,000, or approximately half of the March, 1933, figure
with March of last year. Approximately four per cent fewer people are employed now than in 1929, the board estimated. Total ‘employment in all industries in March, 1937, was put at 4,311,000 compared with 47,276,000, the 1929 average, and 35,586,000 in March, 1933. The advance from 1933 constitutes
a re-absorption of 83.2 per cent of the decline between the 1929 average and the low depression month. In some industries, including manufacturing generally, the-service industries, finance and agriculture combined, the total was higher in
and a drop of 2,225,000 compared
PAGE 27
Halts Suit
A restraining order granted by Federal Judge R. M. Gibson, (above), in Pittsburgh, temporar‘ily halted the Government’s antitrust suit against the Aluminum Co. of America. The order was based on the eompany’s contention that it was already obhserving terms of a consent decree
resulting from a “parallel” suit brought in Pittsburgh in 1912. The Government's suit was filed in the southern district of New York.
0. TOUNVEIL A.E.F. CHAPELS IN CEMETERIES
Also to Be Dedicated This Summer.
By United Press WASHINGTON, May 7, — Dedication of memorial chapels erected in each of the eight American cemeteries in Europe is planned for this
Commission. A total of 30,900 American soldiers are buried in the Meuse-Argonne, Oise-Aisne, St. Mihiel, Aisne-Marne, Somme, Suresnes, Brookwood and Flanders Field cemeteries. The commission, headed by Gen. John J. Pershing, chief the American Expeditionary Forces in the World War, will complete plans soon for the dedication.
Field Movements Marked
Numerous other memorials, mark= ing movements of American soldiers in the war, have been placed by the commission, and will be dedicated. Two bronze memorial tablets, one at Chaumont, France, and the oth- | er at Souilly, France, mark the ‘| headquarters of the American EX- | peditionary forces and the Amer- | ican First Army, respectively, during | the war. | Other memorials have been erected at Montfauson, Montsec, near Chateau-Thierry, Brest, Tours,
Numerous Other Memorials
summer by the Battle Monuments |
Ridge (in the Champagne region) and Cantigny in France; Audenarde and near Ypres, in Belgium; and Gibraltar.
Road Signs Set Up
.» Improved landscape designs have been installed in each of the American cemeteries, and a limited number of road signs showing directions to American cemeteries and memorials have been erected. To memorialize the valor of American soldiers the commission is preparing a survey concerning operations of combat divisions during the World War. : The commission also has in preparation a short history and description of each American cemetery in Europe. It will include a list of the name, rank and organization of men who are buried in the cemeteries or whose names are inscribed
in the chapel as among the missing. i
TOWN AUTO-CONSCIOUS
By United Press WATSONVILLE, Cal, May 7.— This city, originally known as Watson's Corral because of its horse industry, has: become so auto-con-scious that it boasts of the fact there is not a box stall in town for rent.
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