Indianapolis Times, Volume 39, Number 134, Indianapolis, Marion County, 13 October 1927 — Page 9
Second Section
FuU Leased Wire Service cl the United Press Associations.
GRAYSON DASH OVEROCEANIS HALTEDAGAIN Weather May Delay Start Until Later This Week, Fliers Say. DIARY TO BE WRITTEN Former Indiana Woman to Carry Left Hind Foot of Graveyard Rabbit. Bu United Press OLD ORCHARD, Maine, Oct. 13. —Another postponement of Mrs. Frances Wilson Grayson’s projected flight to Copenhagen, Denmark, was necessitated this morning by adverse weather. The Dawn, amphibian plane of the former Muncie, Ind., woman, will not take off until late today, at the earliest, and perhaps not until later this week, it was announced. Call letters WMU have been assigned the radio set in The Dawn by the United States Department of Commerce. Navigator Goldsborough will be at the key of the set during the first fifteen minutes of each hour throughout the flight, except for the first two hours, when he will be busy laving the course. The set has two wave lengths, 630 and 930 meters. A corps of mechanics have overhauled the plane since it arrived here. Hull and wings of the ship have been cleansed of oil and dirt. The interior has been polished and all instruments have been checked and corrected. Mrs. Grayson plans to write the story of the flight as It progresses in a diary she will take with her expressly for that purpose. Asa token of good luck, Mrs. Grayson will take with her the left hind legs of a rabbit said to have been shot ten years ago in a graveyard at midnight in the dark of the moon by a one-eyed Negro. Mrs. Wendel H. Boyd of Portland, Maine, presented the rabbit's foot to Mrs. Grayson yesterday. Loaded with 859 gallons of gasoline and the engines pronounced in perfect shape, the Sikorsky plane stood on the beach here while Goldsborough and Pilot Wilmer Stultz consulted weather maps and charts of the north Atlantic. Ready for Ocean Hop Bu United, Press ST. LOUIS, SENEGAL, West Africa, Oct. 13.—The French airmen, Dieudonne Costes and Joseph Le Brix, planned to start today on their attempt to fly across the South Atlantic to Natal, Brazil, a distance of 2,000 miles. If they arrive at Natal, they will proceed southward, first to Rio de Janeiro, then to Buenos Aires. They are flying a Breguet single-motored land plane. Earlier in the week, Costes and Le Brix flew from Le Bourget to St. Louis, a distance of more than 2,700 miles, without stopping. Plane Resumes Flight B;i Vnitcd Press BRUNSBUETTEL, Germany. Oct. 13.—The Heinkel seaplane D-1220 today resumed its flight to Amsterdam, en route to New York. The plane took off yesterday at Warnemuende, but was forced down in the Elbe river by engine trouble.. Beyond Amsterdam the fliers will choose their route to the United States at their discretion. Engine Trouble Delays Rif United Press LISBON, Oct. 13.—Slight engine trouble today caused the Junkers seaplane D-1230 airmen to postpone until tomorrow resumption of their flight to New York. WIDOW OF RAILROAD HERO TO GET MEDAL Big Four to Present Valor Award to Mrs. Arthur Beckner. The Big Four Railroad’s medal of valor will be awarded at Cincinnati Friday to Mrs. Arthur Beckner, 21 S. Seventeenth St., Beech Grove, in recognition of the bravery of her husband, who was killed in a railroad accident last February. The medal is to be awarded in recognition of Beckner’s courage when with four other yardmen, he risked the flames at the Cleveland Grain Milling Company fire, April 20, 1926, and “under hazardous conditions and in danger of their own lives,” moved sixty freight cars to a point of safety. The four who received their medals at New York last week were: Henry Mansfield, engineer; Harry Slattery, fireman; Lewis Little, conductor, and David Thomas Jr., braV'eman, all of Indianapolis.
GANGWAY, MR, ENGINEER Farmer Autoist, Stalled on Track, Wrathy at Train Crew. RED CLOUD, Neb., Oct. 13.—A farmer sat in his stalled flivver on a railroad track and glowered at the frieght train that bore down upon him. There was a shrieking of brakes and the train slid to a stop with the pilot only a foot from his car. When the engineer and firemen clambered down they were not met with expressions of thanks. “What’s the matter with you fellows?” demanded the farmer savagely. “Didn’t you see me?”
Subject for Old Master A living masterpiece is little Maria Cisar, daughter of a wealthy Czecho-Slovakian land owner. Posed with bonnet and ball, she bears an unintentional likeness to Van Dyek’s famous oil, “The Stuart Child.”
BpllM Iflplpli JbhHh lillii: Jgk- jjr jSSSB fl§s jjjPy ** I Wl\ iif rs WWkW 111 l ~ 1 w * %i|§ \ Jgyg 1 & Mm
FIGHT IMPENDS ON MALT SALE Prohibition Drive Is Planned Against Stores. A drive on stores selling malt and hops for beer making may bo conducted by Federal officials, if convictions are obtained in a Nationwide conspiracy case pending in Minneapolis, George L. Winkler, deputy dry administrator for Indiana, said today. “Sale of preparations for making beer comes under Section 18 of the national prohibition act, I believe,” Winkler said. / “This section makes it unlawful to advertise, sell or possess for sale any contrivance, compound, formula, preparation or recipe designed or intended for use in unlawful manufacture of intoxicating liquor.” Indictments were returned by the recent Federal grand jury against five, representatives of two Chicago companies engaging in wholesale distribution of grape-juice sirup, which when exposed to air for thirty days fermented and became wine. Three of those indicted are under arrest. “It has been difficult to make a case against those guilty of selling malt and hops preparations,” Winkler said. “But convictions in the wine case will pave the way for halting this beer material traffic. “Many drug stores and grocery stores sell these preparations in violation of the law. Large quantities are used by ‘beer joints’ in making home brew.” Sleep Walker Found Bu Times Special PETERSBURG, Ind., Oct. 13. Mrs. Bert Warner, 64, is back at home today apparently none the worse since her disappearance Sunday night while sleeping walking. She was found in a bathhouse at Warner Lake, a mile north of here Wednesday, after hundreds of persons had made a search for her.
Lip Is Beehive Bu NBA Service ASBURY, N. J., Oct. 13. “There’s a bee on you,” exclaims many a traveler in the railway station here to Policeman George Bannon, on duty there. And Bannon always stays each obliging stranger who attempts to brush it off. “That’s Lindy,” explains the officer. “Let him alone.” If the traveler waits, he will see the insect buzz and finally make a landing on Bannon’s upper lip. Then he holds a piece of gum or candy between his teeth and “Lindy” feats heartily. The bee comes every day at about the same time, always seeks out its friend, is fed until it can scarely fly and soars heavily away.
YE NIMBLE HOOSIERS, SKIPPING FROM CRAG TO CRAG IN TRAFFIC, HEARKEN NOW
-=r“pNS, typewriters or pencils in hand, ye pedestrians * who are tired of dodging motors and street cars at downtown intersections! Here’s your chance to help yourself and all your 250,0C0 brothers and sisters who daily walk in the business district. The board of safety has named a committee to study the situation and devise a change in traffic rules which will give pedestrians a chance. This committee is seeking ad-
The Indianapolis Times
SIO,OOO WON BY ANDERSON GIRL Miss Mabel Millspaugh Takes Coca-Cola Prize. Bu Times Special Bu Times Special ANDERSON, Ind., Oct. 1 ’.—Miss Mabel Millspaugh, a stenographer at the Hills-Standard plant here, today has a check for SIO,OOO, first prize in the Coca-Cola Company’s recent advertising contest. The check was presented at a banquet in her honor at the Grand Hotel, by R. C. Tresder of Chicago, v%e president of the Coca-Cola Company. A personal letter from R, M. Woodruff, president of the company and donor of the SIO,OOO, which accompanied the check, was read to those assembled by Miss Millspaugh, who showed remarkable poise and surprising calmness in view of “the thrill that comes once in a lifetime” that she must have been experiencing. A week ago Miss Millspaugh sought a mortgage of $279 on the family home to meet the expense of making repairs. Today she has nearly forty times the amount of the loan sought. She plans to put most of the SIO,OOO in a savings account. A trip to California is one of the pleasures planned for the future. None will be spent for an automobile or “a lot of clothes,” Miss Millspaugh says. She intends to divide the prize half and half with a sister, Ethel, whom she says helped her in winning.
J. S. Yuncker of the Yuncker Bottling Works, Indianapolis, was elated over the fact that the winner of this world-wide contest lives in the territory served by his organization. He felt that he had reason to be aftfer he had been informed by Treseder than more than 883,000 persons participated in the contest, entries coming from every State in the Union, as well as from tvmty-five foreign countries. Miss Katherine Brennan, a young trained nurse in Dallas, Texas, won second prize of $5,000. Mrs. Mildred Siegwarth, Dayton, Ohio, took third prize, $2,500. Fourth prize, SI,OOO, went to Miss Vivian Kressh, Brooklyn, N. Y., a college girl still in her ’teens. The only man to place in the “important money” was Harry H. Ward, a soda dispenser, Enid, Okla., who took fifth prize, SSOO. Earl C. Brown and William C. Fitz Gibbon, both of Indianapolis, won $25 each. PLAN MISSION MEETING Reformed Church Union Session to Be Held Oct. 21. The Missionary Union of the Indianapolis Reformed Churches will hold its semi-annual meeting Oct. 21 ath the St. Pauls’ Reformed Church, 709 N. Belmont Ave. The meeting will begin with a luncheon at 11 o’clock followed by a short business session. The program will begin at 2 p. m.
vice. It is studying the plans of other citizens. The pedestrian who daily dodges, however, may out of the stress of his many narroy escapes, have figured out a plan which would be just the thing. So, The Times has thrown open its columns for meritorious suggestions. Write your solution for the pedestrian traffic problem and mail it to the Traffic The Times. Letters with good ideas will be printed. All letters will be passed along to the board of safety committee. v
INDIANAPOLIS, THURSDAY, OCT. 13, 1927
THOUSANDS OF TEACHERS TO CONVENE HERE State Associations Session Will Be Held Here on Oct. 20-22. NOTABLES ON PROGRAM Glenn Frank One of Leading Speakers; Will Durant Also Booked.
Indiana State Teachers’ Association, noted for “the largest attendance of any educational organization in the world,” assembles here for the seventy-fourth annual session Oct. 20-21-22. Programs for tho event have been completed and are being distributed by Secretary Charles O. Williams from headquarters at the Lincoln. As has been the custom, general sessions will be divided between Cadle Tabernacle and I. O. O. F. hall, with group meetings and social gatherings throughout the city. Outstanding speakers include Publicist President Glenn Frank, University of Wisconsin; Professor Edwin D. Starbuck, philosophy, University of Iowa; Dr. Thomas H. Briggs, Teachers’ College, Columbia University; Dean C. S. Boucher, University of Chicago; President Walter Jessup, University of lowa, and Author-Philosopher Will Durant, New York city. Frank First Speaker Frank will speak at the first evening session and Dr. Durant at the last. Allied arts sectional meetings will be held at Herron Art Institute; attendance officers at the Lincoln; Bible section at Central Christian Church; biology at Arsenal Technical High School; commercial at the Lincoln; county superintendents at the Lincoln; chemistry and physics at Manual Training High School; classical at Masonic Temple; deans of women at Marott; English and library at Meridian St. M. E. Church; federation of public school teachers at Claypool; grammar grades at Pettis Dry Goods Company auditorium. The High School Athletic Association will meet at Manual; high school pr.ncipals at/Manual; geography atOdeon Hall; handwriting at Hollenbeck Hall; history and social science at I. O. O. F. Hall; home economics at Columbia Club; intermediate grade teachers at Cadle Tabernacle; Indiana Parent-Teach-er Association at the Severin; industrial arts at Arsenal Tech; junior high school at Lincoln; mathematics at I. O. O. F. Hall; modern language at Central Christian Chiffch; music at Caleb Mills Hall. Other Sessions Slated Physical education sessions are slated for Cadle Tabernacle; primary at Murat Theater; psychology and education at Athenaeum; secretaries and clerks at Columbia Club; vocational agriculture at Claypool; vocational education at Claypool; ward and village principals at Pettis Auditorium. General Association officers are Superintendent C. W. Boucher, Valparaiso, president; Secretary Williams and Miss Cora Steele, Terre Haute, executive committee chairmen, Boucher, who was chosen at the last session, will deliver his inaugural the first night. The meeting will be called to order by Miss Martha A. Whitacre, Richmond, retiring president. Music on that occasion will be provided by the All-State High School chorus, under direction of Miss Elizabeth Kaltz, Arsenal Technical High School, and Will F. Wise, Shortridge. Other musicians to appear on the three-day program include the Soldiers’ and Sailors’ Orphans’ Home band; Manual Training High School Girls’ Glee Club; Arsenal Technical High School band, and Miss Harriett Payne, Indianapolis, violin soloist. MONON CHIEFS MEEt Directors of Road Hold Session Here After Inspection Trip. Following a two-day inspection of the entire length of the Monon Railroad, directors of the road met here Wednesday noon to discuss results of the inspection. The board meeting usually held in New York, was held in the directors room of the Fletcher Savings and Trust Company, because New York directors were here for the inspection, Evans Woollen, director said. Following the meeting, the board composed of H. R. Kurie, Chicago; Walter J. Riley, Indiana Harbor; A. E. Reynolds, Crawfordsville* Lewis Islin and F. B. Adams of New York, were guests of Woollen at the University Club for luncheon.
iFFICIALS and citizens for years have, recognized the weak point in the city traffic system—that there is no period when pedestrians may cross a downtown street without having to watch for street cars or automobiles turning across their paths. “I don’t see how you folks In Indianapolis have gotten along without a great many serious accidents with the system you have,” said R. C. Bent, Detroit department store salesman, here on business.
SKATES ZIP UP DAY’S WORK Speed and More Speed Is Roller Girl f s Slogan
it—“IOLLER skating’s either a IR pastime or suicide for some |* lof us, but for Miss Harriet McNamara, 1550 Ashland Aire., employe of the Western Union, it’s the day’s work. She skates ’round and ’round the company's operating room on the ninth floor of the Guarantee Bldg., carrying thousands of messages from one desk to another. Gracefully she weaves her way in and out among the busy workers, and turns her corners with a finish. “In our business seconds, rather than minutes, count,” said C. W. Steinhauer, superintendent. “Every second is valuable.” That's why the Western Union put its employes on roller skates. And within four years, the skaters have had only two spills, a record to be envied by the rink. “I love to skate,” expJ*iiiea Miss McNamara, “and it des not tire me a bit. If I walk jo that much every day, I would be exhausted.” When you hand your message over the counter of the main office it is shot up to the distribution center in a pneumatic tubs. Miss McNamara, or one of her fellow skaters, picks it up on her rollers, and carries it to the proper trunk circuit. Speed, speed, speed, is the watchword. Every stroke f the typewriter is counted, and unnecessary punctuation marks and spaces eliminated. Twenty-three clocks are placed so that employes can see the time from any point in the room without turning their heads. When a wire breaks down on the road, the main office can measure the distance to the point of trouble by an Metrical measuring apparatus, and a lineman is sent there in double-quick time. Whether it be clocks, roller skates or electrical inventions, nothing is overlooked in the search for time-saving devices. MONKEYS GET RAY CURE Bu Vnitcd Prrsg NEW YORK, Oct. 13.—Five expensive animals, a howling monkey, a grivet monkey and three lemurs, will ill in the New York Zoological Park. They had “cage paralysis,” a disease very similar to rickets. Doctors treated them with ultraviolet rays for three weeks and were rewarded by seeing them become lively again.
PURNELL SEES WAR MOVES IN GERMANY, FRANCE AND ITALY
HEAVY TOLL IS TAKENBYWIND South and Southwest Are Swept by Storms. Bu United Press KANSAS CITY. Mo., Oct. 13. More storms troubled the South and Middle West today, following a series of high winds over an extended area Wednesday. Dell, Ark., reported the most serious storm, with four dead and a score injured. Property damage was estimated at SIOO,OOO. Carbondale and Benton, 111., were struck by high winds which uprooted trees, damaged houses and caused damage running into thousands of dollars. Rain and wind were reported from parts of the southeast today. ACTOR MAKES RUBBER Synthetic Product Is Perfected by Stock Company Player. Bit United Press UTICA, N. Y., Oct. 13.—John J. Owen, character playef with a stock company here, has invented a synthetic rubber which he will manufacture w-ith a company just organized at a capita lof $150,000. The plant wil be located in Newark, N. J. Owen is a native of Somerville, “Mass., where he owns a drug store there. He claims his product is made without using any of the elements contained in natural rubber.
No More Bobs Bii Times Special ELWOOD, Ind., Oct. 13. Alonzo Webb, local barber, has served notice that hereafter women can’t get their hair bobbed at his shop. He recently became a convert of the Holi-' ness church. In announcing the bobbing ban, Webb said: “A brother in testimony at church said God showed him that it was wrong for me to bob a woman’s hair and I don’t want to be a stumbling block in anyone’s way.”
“In Detroit, with a million or so Flivvers and Chevies flitting around, we recognized the pedestrian’s rights years ago and provided that at the busy corners street cars and automobiles make no turns at the time when pedestrians are crossing. “Pedestrians cross with the traffic stream. Automobiles do not turn until they get the stop sign and then turn into the moving traffic stream. On many important corners, turns are not permitted. Thus there is a
i .'■si '■—<
MISS HARRIET M’NAMARA
Indiana Representative Believes Three Are Eager for New Conflict. Bu United Tress ATTICA, Ind., Oct. 13.—The nations of Europe, particularly Germany, France and Italy, are preparing for war, just as though they had not recently engaged in a devastating conflict, declared Fred S. Purnell, representative in Congress from the Ninth district of Indiana, on his return home from France this week. “The nations of Europe are all busy and gradually recovering from the effects of the World War,” declared Purnell in a interview with the United Press today. “However,” he added. “Germany, France and Italy seem looking forward, almost eagerly, toward another war. That has been their principal business for centuries and they can’t seem to get out of the habit.” France Is Poor Purnell, who made a tour of Europe after the close of the American Legion convention at Paris, summarized his observation as follows: “The French government is poor, but individual Frenchmen have amassed vast fortunes through business fluctuations during and since the World War. Everybody in France is hard at work. There are more women in the fields than men, though, due to the terrific casualties that country sustained. "Switzerland is the most prosperout and cleanest country I saw. It wisely stayed out of the war and profited hugely by neutrality. Germany Advances “Italy seems the least prosperous, due to the fact that the land is poorer and less tillable than in other countries. Then, too, Italy is fairly alive with soldiers who necessarily continue a great drain upon its resources. Nevertheless, Mussolini is doing a great work, and seems to be the man of the hour. His iron handed methods, while repugnant to modem conception of democracy, have succeeded in holding a tottering nation together and will in the end restore it to its former place among the nations of the earth. “Germany is making more rapid strides than any other European country toward reconstruction, and though smarting under its great load of debt, and the shame of defeat, its people are saying little and sawing much wood.
definite period when walkers may move.” . • * SHE antics of persons trying to get across the comers where the diagonal avenue, Indiana, Kentucky, Virginia and Massachusetts end, intrigued Lawrence Bitter, Chicago, baking powder salesman. “Getting across Michigan Blvd. during the rush hours is like walking through a 40-acre pasture compared with trying to thread your way between street trucks and passenger motors from the
Second Section
Entered as Second-class Matter at PostoSlce. Indianapolis.
U.S. TO DECIDE REVENGE CASE Miriam Wright Asks That Rival Be Deported. Bu United Press WASHINGTON, Oct. 13.—The labor department immigration board of review tomorrow will take up a woman’s plea for revenge on another woman, to see if the law is on the side of revenge. The .plea is that of Miriam Lloyd Wright, wife of the famous architect, Frank Lloyd Wright, for deportation of Olga Milanoff Hinzenberg, mother of a child by Wright. Complications of the triangle have attracted national attention, especially Wright’s action in ousting his wife from his home at Spring Green, Wis. Olga Milanoff was arrested last March on a deportation warrant, while living with Wright in New York, and Mrs. Wright has protested against continuance of the case. The woman, known as a dancer, gave Montenegro as her home, on her arrival in 1924. Wright cannot marry her and make her a citizen until he succeeds in obtaining a final divorce from Mrs. Wright. It was his divorce suit that led Mrs. Wright to ask for deportation of Olga Milanoff.
Not Appealing Bu Times Special WABASH, Ind., Oct. 13. Sitting by the side of a road with a shotgun across one’s lap is a poor way to get a lift from passing motorists, Ernest Kelsey learned. While squirrel hunting, Kelsey jumped over a fence, dislocating an ankle. He crawled to the road, dragging the shotgun. Then he sat down, holding the gun, hoping some motorist would give him a lift into the city. But they all passed him up. Finally police called by a farm woman, who had noticed Kelsey, arranged to have him brought here for treatment.
Lincoln Hotel to Hook's drug store,” said Bitter. “Os course, I suppose you get adept at it after eight or nine years’ of experience, but an outsider wonders why, with such beautiful wide streets to work with, you folks haven’t done something for yourself. You all have to walk sometime, whether you have a car or not.” This is what a couple of outsiders said about us. Perhaps you’ve something more practical to dffer. Write a letter now.
INDIANA MINE ! PEACEPROVES BUSINESS AID Manufacturing and Building Continue on Prosperous Levels. REPORTS OF EXPANSION New Factories and Plant Additions Noted in Various Cities. Settlement of the coal mine strik® was the most encouraging business factor in Indiana during the past week. The settlement will give impetus to business in cities throughout the coal belt, extending from Clinton, north, to Princeton on the south. A survey of conditions in the State for the week shows continued activity in manufacture and building. Reports on business conditions in various Indiana cities follow: BLOOMINGTON—A new $150,000 stone mill has been completed by the Monon Stone Corppany south of Clear Creek, said to be one of the finest in the Indiana district. Anew quarry is being opened by R. G. Koadley, Bloomington, northwest of the city. HAMMOND Excavation has started for the new $1,250,000 building of the Lion store. EAST CHlCAGO—Erection of the first of three new units, additions to the local plant of the HarblsonWalker Refractories Company is under way. The units will be used in employing anew method of burning silica fire brick and will cost $1,500,000. GARY—A $450,000 theater with a seating capacity of 1.500 will be built by the Fiftyler Realty Company. Attica Merchants Active ATTICA Merchants here ar® stimulating fall business by distributing SSO in prizes Thursday of each week. EVANSVILLE An eight-story tower to be used in food manufacturing is being erected for the Mead Johnson Company. KOKOMO—Reports thus far in 1927 on bank clearings, postoffleo receipts, telephone installations and water and gas consumption show considerable increase over last year. MARION The Gfneral Paper Company of Marion has bought the plant of the Elkhart Stationery Company and will move it here. Between seventy-five and 100 persona will be employed by the enlarged plant. James Brandon and Jacob Bohn have established a candy manufacturing plant. More Freight Moves
FT. WAYNE—The Ft. Wayne division of the Pennsylvania railroad, due to increased business, has recalled to duty thirty-eight freight train brakemen. who had been on the furlough list. COLUMBUS—The local plant of the Indianapolis Pump and Tube Company plans to begin active operations Jan. 1 in manufacturing automobile spotlights. At present the plant is filling orders for 80,000 auto heaters. • DECATUR—The local plant ot the Holland-St. Louis Sugar Company started operations thi§ week to continue three months on a day and night basis. WINCHESTER-The third addition within a few years to the plant of the Overmyer Mould Company, recently completed, is now in use. WABASH—A cheese manufacturing plant will be in operation within a few weeks, requiring about, fifteen tons of milk a week. Charles Latchem and Roy Wertenberger are backing the concern. WIRE HOME FOR MONEY; Girl Adventurers Are Stranded After Hike to Florida. Two Indianapolis girls who went adventuring to Florida were on their way home today on money furnished by their parents. Miss Naomi Anderson, 17, of 752 W. New York St., and Miss Alma Dunrford. 15. of 146 N. Blackford St left mst Thursday for Florida with 810 capital. Given auto rides and free lodging at farm houses they had $5.65 left when they arrived at Jacksonville, Fla. Lodged in jail, they wired Lee J. Ray, 752 W. New York St., Misa Anderson’s stepfather, who sent railroad fare home. VOTE BY ELECTRICITY, Swedish Law Makers Use Apparatus Adopted by Wisconsin. liy l lilted Preit STOCKHOLM. Oct. 13—Following the example of the Wisconsin State Legislature, the Swedish and Finish Riksdags have adopted electrical voting apparatus. The Swedish L. M. Ericsson Telephone Company is now installing an automativ device in the session room of the Riksdag at Helsingfors, making it possible to take a poll of 200 votes in seventy seconds. Similar appartus shortly will be put up in the rooms of the two chambers at Stockholm. Spencer Hound Wins h CONNERSVILLE, Ind., Oct. 13—A hound owned by Hendric Nole, Spencer, today holds highest honors in the field trials of the Southern Indiana and State Fox Hunters’ Association, which has been in session here since Tuesday. Mildred, owned by Harry Sapper, Noblesville, is in second place, and a hound owned by Rex Masters, Stilesville, third.
