Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 15 April 1942 — Page 12
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TWO TEACHERS RESIGN POSTS
Three Others Get Leaves; $4000 Spent for New | Reference Books.
Present Dr
Two resignations were accepted; 3
and three indefinite leaves of ab-! sence were granted in the teaching staff of city schools by the school] board last night. | Lois Clugston, primary teacher of | school 69 and Lunetta Fetter, pri- | mary teacher of school 34. resigned | because of their health. Chester McNerney, physical education instructor at Washington | high school, and Robert Campbell, | Shortridge high school English in-| structor, were granted leaves to join the armed forces. The other leave was granted to Mrs. Viola H. Maudlin of school 49. | A. B. Good, schools business di-|} rector, reported the purchase of| $4003 in reference books for the! elementary schools. ! Mr. Good also announced the pur- | chase of tools amounting to | $2000 for defense classes at Tech-| nical and Manual high schools. |
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RIYA
EAST WASHINGTON
| presidential-proclaimed
“Park Victory” will be presented by the Indiana Central college dramatic society Friday at the Kephart Memorial auditorium on the outstanding i | > x n 000 fo le campus. Lead roles have been assigned to (left to right) Devon Gilg iS $1) rifacie ole | Robbins of Huntington, Miss Hope Bean of Laurel and Miss Ann | Emmert of Brazil. Other members
Rochester: Carol Vertrees, Elnora:
| Dietz, Brazil; Mary Rider, Westfield, Ill.; Wayne Walters, Logansport; Alice Beecher, Crawfordsville; Clara Files, Flora, Ill, and Glen Presnell, Miss LaDonna Willman of Vernon is director of the
Riverside, Cal production and Miss Leora Weimer
Police Station |
To Accept Books
POLICE CHIEF Morrissey announced today that police headquarters had been chosen as one of the contribution depots in the “Victory Bock Day” next Friday. Books taken there for use by | men in the armed services should |
| be given to the record bureau of-
fice on the first floor.
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DEBT DEGLINES)
$1,737,730 Total Lowest In 20 Years; Memorial
Issue Highest.
One bright spot in the local tax! picture is the county government's bond debt, $1,737,730, the lowest it | has been for about 20 years. | The current debt total, which does | not include, $3,806,000 poor relief bonds allocated to the various townships, is $4,894,000 less than the peak bond debt reached in 1929. One of the biggest bond debt drags on the county government 12 years ago was $993,000 in gravel road bonds. All of them have been retired in the last 10 years.
Memorial Issue Largest
The largest single bond issue outstanding now is $635,000 for the World War Memorial building. This issue originally was $1,250,000 in 1922 when the building was started. The second largest issue still unpaid is $427,000 sold between 1925 and 1930 for flood prevention projects here. Another large block of bonds still
vation projects. amounted to more back in the 20s.
May Clear in 5 Years
These originally
of the cast include John Champlin, than $700,000
Jane Wiley, Shelbyville, Imogene
If no new large bonds are issued, the county will be nearly out of debt or Bg, se within five years except for the $3,806,000 poor relief bonds. These were issued in behalf of separate township units during the depression
years when the relief expense was
is faculty sponsor.
COUNTY'S BOND
ROOM LOTS 79¢ up
STATE WALLPAPER
& PAINT CO. 110 Se. PENN.—RI-2772
too great to pay out of current taxes. ASKED BY k ) Y The relief bonds are not chargef 8 1 | able to the county government since nt ey they must be retired by the town- . " ship advisory boards. Lack of Solidarity Will * Invite Nazi Success, He Mrs. Smiley Heads . » Tells Neighbors. Church Council WASHINGTON, April 15 (U. P). FT. WAYNE, April 15—Mis. —President Roosevelt has impressed| J. H. Smiley of Indianapolis was upon the Latin American repub-| re-elected president of the Indi{lics the advantages of complete ana Council of Churchwomen to- | Fat : . | day at the annual convention in {unanimity in the Western Hemi- session here. The meeting will |sphere and invited their closer col-| close tomorrow. laboration in “the survival war.” Mrs. Ralph L. Holland, also of Warning, in effect, that a lack of| Indianapolis, was re-elected coreshitinentsl hemispheric solidarity Fo yo Othe r Pi will invite German successes, Mr. Nebbergall of South Bend; Mrs. Roosevelt told representatives of Frank Heizer, Bloomington; Mrs. |those nations yesterday that if any o 2 Laem Riss Js. C. a : a . Hettmansperger, ayne; part of fie hemithinre Sere to fall Mrs. A. C. Payne, Terre Haute, junder Nazi domination, “we| 5,4 Mrs. B. Frances Wright, Dunwouldn't live the same kind of) reith. Mrs, E. L. Eggers of Hamlives.” mond was appointed representaHe promised them that “after the tive to the national council. axis is defeated” and "it comes to SE cleaning up the mess at the end of this war,” all the western hemi- 300 0l0 WORKERS sphere nations will have “a very great voice” in planning for pre- HERE PLEDGE BLOOD vention of future attacks on Amer-| Toan civilization. , 3 | Pledges by about 300 Indianapolis We 1478 al! Sot 36 Sefince; he a I. O. workers to donate blood | said, “but we are going to come out| Beilin delivered to th Red | the winner in the long run.” were to be gelive . e | : : ..»| Cross blood donor center today. We are going places. We Will It was the first installment of | get somewhere. And we are going| led take : > | to have a couple years, perhaps|P S08®S =H de & 0: vO: came; three, before we can make sure that DE ha Wey 1 O. blood our type of civilization is going tot" nyitice chairman, said that| survive. I am perfectly confident neh 2s ed of it myself.” a majority of the Indianapolis | s C. I. O. council's 40,000 members would donate. Last week 17 mem‘HOUSE UNIT FROWNS bers of the Packing House Workers’ Organizing commiteee at ArON NEW LABOR BILL mour & Co. visited the donor cen- | : at ter in a body and donated blood. | WASHINGTON, April 15 (U, P.). ; : : sana] |e house naval affairs commit- OD Ee to obtain] tee appeared to be preparing today RNa : 3 to modify drastically iii com- Too plats of blood jnmetiotely, letely the pending Smith-Vinson ! labor-profits bill ‘Y’ OPENS 24 HOURS | The legislation, sponsored by committee chairman Carl Vinson) FOR WAR WORKERS (D. Ga.) and Rep. Howard Smith A 24-hour open house for indus(D. Va.), would lengthen the basic| trial workers began today at the work week in war plants from 40| Central Branch Young Men's Christo 48 hours, freeze closed shop con-| tian association. ditions as of March 1 and limit war| Men working odd shifts found it contract profits to approximately 8| difficult to get proper health exerper cent on contracts of more than|cises. The open house is designed to $100,000. | demonstrate that the facilities are Rep. Vinson was the only one of| open no matter what hours of work, committee members reached by the| according to E. R. Hallock, physical United Press who said he was ready | director. to vote for the bill as it stood. One| Emm { other said he was undecided. ! W ALLP APER RHSX DEhies EARLY 25% OFF ON SUBS WASHINGTON. April 15 (U. P) ON ALL 1941 PATTERNS | — Secretary of the Navy Frank Thousands of rolls for every |Knox is confident that “eventualiy|] room . . . beautiful colors . . . we will beat the game” but makes|| 8uaranteed quality . . . unite Ino promise of immediate solution) 26d wushebles . . . compan. ‘of the submarine problem on the or Shs mies: You cans ens {East coast of the United States. ESS ren Yous | His statements on that subject ‘in Boston on April 13 were misin!terpreted and he did not say that (East coast sinkings would be inegligible after May 1. | Col. Knox told Boston gquestion-| ers that 100 airplanes had been added to the East coast patrol and that more than 100 additional small craft would be in that service by May 1.
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