Indianapolis Times, Volume 39, Number 276, Indianapolis, Marion County, 15 March 1928 — Page 1

EIGHT PROBERS TO FIX CAUSE OF DAMBREAK City, County Officials to Sift Reports of Flood Disaster. ESTIMATE TOLL AT 275 Tractors, Dynamite Being Used in Hunt for Bodies Believed Buried. B,ti United Press LOS ANGELES, March 15.—Eight separate official investigations started inquiry today to determine the cause and fix responsibility for the St. Francis dam disaster. Coroner O. L. Reardon of Ven- j tura County, called inquests at Ox- j nard, Moor Park, Fillmore and j Santa Paula. These will precede a major in- | quest Friday by Coroner Frank E. Nance of Los Angeles County. These inquests and investigations ! undertaken by Jess Stevens, Los Angeles city attorney, and Asa Keyes, Los Angeles County district ! attorney, will determine the legal aspect of the case. Stevens’ chief interest as head of the city’s legal staff lies in the liability in which the city may be involved. He interpreted the situation as binding the city for damages only in case there is established negligence or carelessness in building or operating the dam. ftii United Press SANTA PAULA, Cal., March 15. j The hunt for bodies of victims of the St. Francis dam disaster was re- j sumed today in the Santa Clara ! River basin with dynamite, tractors j and all kinds of farming imple- j ments. Additional hundreds of searchers | slowly cut their way through debris | and piles of mud and sand left by j the flood that swept the valley after j the dam broke. The unofficial list of dead and missing stood at between 250 and 275, with 300 or more still missing and many of them believed buried under debris or swept out to sea. Efforts of searchers were centered today at a point near Satiscoy, where the river bed widened and the flood spent itself. Eleven bodies were found there. Many other bodies are believed buried in this "death cache” where tons of clay and sand were j deposited. Find Eleven Mutilated Bodies The eleven bodies recovered were j badly mutilated and lay huddled in | a basin-like grave. It is believed j that many of the 300 to 400 reported j missing will be found in this sector. ! The parade of grief-stricken mothers, fathers, brothers and sisters continued today along the sixty-mile stretch of river basin. From morgue to morgue they went, seeking missing loved ones. While the search for the dead went on, reconstruction efforts gained new headway as telephone, railway and highway workers sought to re-establish broken communication. Pestilence —the inevitable viitsor of flood-swept cities—brought new fear today to the stricken Santa Clara river valley. Move to Stop Disease While searchers continued their disconsolate hunt in crevices, debris and mud for more bodies, health authorities moved swiftly to avert the spread of disease over the wasted region. Weather Conditions were such that pestilence, once started, soon would gain tremendous headway, health authorities said. Water in the region was tested by authorities, and preparations were made to inoculate all flood survivors for typhoid. The damage toll mounted as further checks were made. Conservative estimates today placed the damage at about $15,000,000, and it may run much higher. The loss to farmers and fruit growers in the region alone will be at least $5,000,000, A. H. Call, county horticultural commissioner said. The top soil of the fertile valley was entirely washed away, and in most cases retillage will be necessary, he said. A report that a leak had been discovered in the dam several weeks ago was denied by officials. They also denied that the dam was of faulty construction. Says Dam Solid The dam probably will not be reconstructed. Stanley Dunham, construction engineer, said that the structure was anchored on bedrock and was one of the best engineering feats of its kind ever accomplished. A company of 200 militiamen was expected to be transferred to active duty at the flood area today. The guard was ordered to assist peace officers in the enforcement of law and to keep morbid sightseers away. Hundreds who flocked to the scene hampered the work of relief workers. Food and clothing supplies are almost adequate, it was said. •“■ 1 ■ Hourly Temperatures 6 a. m,... 32 10 a. m— 35 7 a. m.... 31 11 a. m.. ..36 8 a. m.... 32 12 (noon). 37 9a. m..t. 34 Ip. in.... 40

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The Indianapolis Times Mostly cloudy tonight and Friday, probably rain or snow; not mucli change in temperature, lowest tonight 25 to 30.

VOLUME 39—NUMBER 276

Goes to Trial

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City Councilman Boyton J. Moore, who went on trial on bribery charge in Criminal Court today, is first of six councilmen to face trial on indictments of the alleged attempt of John L. Duvall to stave off impreachment by buying council votes last fall.

500 TO DISCUSS MANAGER PLAN State Parley Is Scheduled in City Friday. Five hundred persons from Indianapolis and twenty-six State towns will attend a city manager conference at the Claypool, Friday. The conference is sponsored by the Indianapolis City Manager League to answer questions asked regarding the manager plan, since it was adopted by Indianapolis. Evansville and Terre Haute, where city manager campaigns have been started, and Michigan City, which had a city manager, will be represented. A delegation will attend from Grand Haven. Mich. Other Indiana towns to send delegations. Lafayette, Ft. Wayne, Muncie, Crawfordsville, Anderson, New Albany, Elkhart, Richmond, Madison, Oakland City, Frankfort. Newcastle, Bloomington. North Manchester, Windfall, Hammond. Elwood, Tipton, Columbus, Princeton and Shelbyville. Speakers will include: Dr. Leonard* D. White, University of Chicago orofessor of political science; Mrs. H. R. Misener. Michigan City, and L. W. Clapp, Wichita, Kan., banker. Charles P. Taft, 11, Cincinnati, prosecuting attorney; Claude H. Anderson. executive secretary of the local league, and Winfield Miller, State city manager law author.

LINDY TO BE HOST Invites 531 Congressmen to Fly With Him. B,tt l nited Press WASHINGTON, March 15— Col. Charles A. Lindbergh, is to invite the 435 members of the House and ninety-six members of the Senate to take flights with him. Lindbergh will address a letter to Vice President Dawes and Speaker Longworth of the House this afternoon asking that his invitation be formally presented to both Houses. Lindbergh went to she Capitol unexpectedly today and held a long conference in Dawes’ private room. He also conferred with Longworth in the latter’s office. Commerce Air Secretary MacCracken and (Naval Air Secretary Warner accompanied him. ‘SPANK IF YOU WISH’ Girl Returns Home After Mother Is Find for Whipping. Bn United Press KANSAS CITY, Kan., March 15. —There’s no place like home to Lorene Jones, a penitent. Lorene, 16, a week ago swore out a warrant for the arrest of her mother, Mrs. Charles Woodside, because the latter whipped her with a coat hanger. Lorene left home after the whipping. The mother was fined SIOO in police court. Lorene returned home last night, ready to take, she said, what punishment her mother saw fit to give her. Mother and daughter embraced. BANKRUPTCYSUIT UP Cadle Voluntary Action Heard by Wilde. Hearing on the .voluntary bankruptcy petition of E. Howard Cadle, 5207 N. Meridian St., one of the organizers of the Cadle Tabernacle, was begun before Carle Wilde, Federal referee in bankruptcy, today. Cadle listed unsecured claims of $118,134, including losses in Florida, and assets of S4OO. He testified that of the $85,000 he and Mrs. Cadle invested in the tabernacle, they realized only $30,000. Cadle testified his $250,000 interest in the eighteen American Shoe Rebuilders’ Association stores has dwindled to a SSO share, and Mrs. Cadle’s stock to $5,000. The hearing yas continued to April 17.

MOORE GOES TO TRIAL ON BRIBECHARGE Little Progress Is Made at Opening Session in Jury Selection. DEFENSE LOSES POINT Councilman Fails to Get Hearing on Municipal Officer Statute. Al ter only one talesman had been challenged, for cause, by the defense this morning, questioning of the prospective jurymen continued on its final round this afternoon in the bribery case of Councilman Boynton J. Moore. The case is being heard before Special Judge Paul G. Davis ui Criminal Court. When it first got under way this morning, an attempt was made by Defense Attorney Ira M. Holmes to have the matter prosecuted under the statute governing munical officers, rather than the general bribery law. This was overruled by the court, who pointed out that it was up to the State to decide under what statute the case should be prosecuted. The state chose the general bribery charges. Big Difference in Penalties Under the municipal officer law the maximum penalty would have been a SI,OOO fine, while under the general statute a two to fourteen years prison sentence is possible, should the defendant be found guilty. Today was Holmes’ first appearance in the case. The juror dismissed was Frank M. Heges, who said he operated a printing establishment at 229 E. Ohio St., near the city hall, and had formed an opinion regarding the guilt of the defendant. All but four of the jurymen remaining in the box when court opened this aftrenoon were members of the regular jury panel. Those not belonging to the regular panel were George R. Tilton, of 2630 College Ave., called to fill Heges’ place; Homer Day, of 425 N. La Salle St.; E. S. Blessing, of 138 N. Illinois St., and John C. Wetnight, R. R. l. Eight Regulars Left Regular panel members in the jury box included Charles E. Bragg, R. R. A.; Fred C. Buesking, Cumberland; Rex P. Armstrong, R. R. C : Orville Baker. 315 S. Taft St.; Samuel H. Colbert, Negro, R. R. A,; Fred C. Borneman, Lowrence, Ind.; James H. Barber, Mars Hill, and Walter Boepcher, of 1142 W. Thirty-Second .St. All had passed the preliminary questioning. Among the crowd of spectators in the courtrooom at the opening session were William H. (Bill) Armitage. one-time political “boss,” and Charles Clark ,one-time foreman of a grand jury engaged in political corruption probing, and later employed by the Duvall administration at city hall. It was understood that the defense will call about thirty witnesses, mostly for testimony in support of Moore’s character. The indictment on which Moore went to trial charges that he solicited and accepted SIOO from John J. Collins, then city purchasing agent, shortly before the city council session in which impeachment of Mayor John L. Duvall has threatened. Duvall, Collins and Miss Pearl Nichols, former secretary to the mayor, are expected to be the principal State’s witnesses. Several others will be called. Davis, who is presiding, was selected Monday of this week, after four lists of three judges each had been submitted by Criminal Judge James A. Collins. Detectives Coming for Bigamist Detectives are expected today from Cleveland to take Cecil Metz, there for trial on bigamy charge. Metz was arrested here Wednesday. Metz is also wanted in Cincinnati, rn charge of wife and child desertion, it is said.

Tune in Oil up the old radio dials and tune in on WFBM Friday and Saturday and get the play-by-play account of the State basketball tournament from Butler University’s new field house. Again this year for the fourth time, The Indianapolis Times will broadcast the tourney. Your old friends of radioland, Blythe and Tommy Hendricks, will do the talking. Here’s how! They will give a detailed description of every game from the first whistle Friday morning until the final gun booms Saturday night. Blythe and Tommy won’t miss a thing. Don’t forget—The Indianapolis Times will broadcast the entire State basketball tournament Friday ard Saturday over WFBM, Indianapolis Light and Power Company station.

INDIANAPOLIS, THURSDAY, MARCH 15,1928

Hope Faint That Fliers Still Live

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, . , NEA London Bureau. Hope has been given up for Capt. W G. R. Hinchliffe and his companion, Elsie Mackay, daughter of a wealthy British ship owner, attempting the westward crossing of the Atlantic. Hinchliffe and a duplicate of his plane, with a map of the route he was to follow to America, are shown above.

COURT BATTLE FORECAST ON BUILDING OF SCHOOLS

Plane and ‘Husky’ Team Speed Food to Village Bn United Press SAULT STE. MARIE. Mich., March 15.—A team of seven picked “huskies” mushed south today through a driving blizzard, carrying food and medicines to the 600 residents of Detour, Mich., snowbound for nearly three weeks. The dogs, driven by Dr. John F. Steadman, conveyed a sled laden with 100 pounds of food, tobacco and medicine. Dr. Steadman, with one companion, left here last night, but was halted by the storm until dawn at Keldon, twenty-miles south. At the same time an Army transport plane was winging toward northern Michigan from Mt. Clemens, carrying food to the snowbound village. The plane was expected to reach the Oscada army ba.se by mid-afternoon for refueling. Then it will come to Sault Ste. Marie, where it will be equipped with gkiis and loaded with provisions. A snow motor, carrying 1,000 pounds of provisions, left late yesterday in charge of Clarence Paquin, newspaper man. but had not been heard from since it passed Keldon, and it was believed it had been forced to halt by the blizzard. The relief expeditions, if successful, will carry the first food that has entered Detour for more than two weeks.

INCOME TAXES DUE BY NIGHT Offices to Remain Open Until Deadline. Internal revenue offices on the third floor of the Federal building will remain open until midnight tonight to accommodate income taxpayers, George L. Foote, acting collector of internal revenue, announced today. Foote added that reports and checks bearing a postmark earlier than midnight will be accepted. Federal building corridors were filled today with long lines of last minute taxpayers. Foote said today indications are the total receipts by tonight will be nearly as great as for the same period last year, when approximately $8,000,000 was collected. Some loss this year is anticipated because two heavy income taxpayers who paid here last year will pay at Chicago. More than $1,500,000 was collected Wednesday. KIDNAPS LITTLE CHILD Man Picks Up Child on Street and Drives Away. Pit United Press LEIGH, Neb., March 15. —An unknown man kidnaped 5-year-old Gwendolyn Tharis on the streets of Leigh at 8:30 a. m. today and drove east on the main highway with her in an automobile.

STEWART ARRAIGNED ‘Not Guilty/ Oil Man Pleads in Contempt Case. By United Press WASHINGTON, March 15.—Robert W. Stewart pleaded not guilty today of charges of contempt of the Senate. Stewart, chairman of the Standard Oil Company of Indiana, appeared before Chief Justice Walter I. McCoy of the District of Columbia Supreme Court to answer to the four counts of an indictment voted three weeks ago. The indictment charged violation of the law empowering the Senate to obtain testimony under oath in connection with legislation. It was voted on request of the Senate as a result of Stewart’s refusal to tell the Teapot Dome committee all he knew about the disposal of Liberty bond profits of the Continental Trading Company.

GERMAN-SOVIET BREACH LOOMS Russians’ Arrest of Engineers Causes 111 Feeling. By United Press BERLIN. March 15.—Germany intends immediately to break off negotiations with Russia for a commercial treaty. It was learned today, because Russia arrested six German engineers for complicity in an alleged plot to wreck the Donetz Basin mines. News of the prospective breach was revealed after a cabinet meeting today. There had been widespread resentment over the arrest of the Germans. They were charged by the cheka—the Russian secret police—with being among a group of conspirators who, it was said, planned to sabotage rich Donetz Basin mines as part of an antiovemment plot. ' Some Germans charged that the plot was a frame-up by Russian engineers, who hoped by it to conceal damage their own inefficient work had caused. Fliers Sail for Orient But United Press SAN FRANCISCO, March 15. Joseph Lebrix and Dieudonne Costes, French fliers, and Major Arthur Goebel, winner of the CaliforniaHawaii Dole flight, will sail from here today aboard the liner Korea Maru for “good-will” flights in the Far East.

“My Housekeeping Rooms Rented Quickly Thru Your Want Ads” FLETCHER. 1233 —2 or 3 rms. and kitchenette: furnished: modern: crivate family. Drex. 5067-R. “Never saw' such quick and satisfying results as my ad produced in your paper,” says Mrs. L. A. Carle, 1233 Fletcher Ave. Mrs. Carle’s rooms are only one suite of many, rented last week thru Times Want Ads. You, too, can rent your room if you write a good ad and place it before more than a quarter million daily Times readers. Two-line room for rent ad. 6 days, SI.OO. Call MA. 3500. Ask for Betty Lou.

Board of Education Hints Injunction Plea Against Tax Commission. Use of court injunction to prevent interference by the State tax board in awarding of bids and construction of school buildings was contemplated today by the Indianapolis school board, it was indicated by Theodore F. Vonnegut, president. “We are investigating our rights under the law and as soon as we know definitely where we stand, we will be prepared to go into the courts to prevent undue interference, if necessary,” Vonnegut said. Serving warning on the school board that bidding on heating and ventilating systems for four proposed school buildings and additions “must be open and competitive.” the tax board Wednesday authorized receipt of bids for the additions. May Permit Bond Issue In the order, the tax board made this requirement and said if it is met, that issuance of $600,000 bonds for the building probably will be authorized. “Heating and ventilating bidding always has been and always will be open and competitive,” Charles W. Kern, majority faction board member. said. “If we can get architects to draw plans for more than one system, provided the systems comply with all provisions of the sanitary schoolhouse law, without extra cost, as the tax board suggested, I, for one, shall be happy. “If the architects want, to charge more, we will have /to see the tax board again and ask what to do. They probably will tell us who their friends are.” Kern declared use of any system of heating and ventilating complying with the law is “agreeable with me.” Vonnegut, in discussing the tax board requirement that more than one system be included in specifications, said: “When you build a city street, you advertise for brick, concrete, asphalt, tarvia or some other sort of material. The same thing applies to school heating and ventilation. You either use the direct-indirect, split or some other type of system.” Action Wednesday was the first taken by the tax board on the bond issue since the hearing two weeks ago, when each board member scored the apparent lack of competition in heating and ventilating specifications and bids. Jackson’s Birthday Today But United Press WASHINGTON, March 15.—The birthday of Andrew Jackson, seventh President of the United States, passed today without special observance here.

WILD FUND GROWS 10 Per Cent Dividend Soon . Seen for Depositors. Payment of another 10 per cent dividend to depositors in the defunct J. F. Wild & Cos. Bank may be possible by the middle of May, Probate Judge Mahlon E. Bash said today. It is likely, however, that the payment will be held up until June or late May so that a larger payment may be made. The expense of mailing out between 15,000 and 18,000 checks, clerk hire and other overhead makes it more economical to wait until a larger dividend can be paid. The largest item expected the next few weeks will be $200,000 from the sale of the bank building. This money is due before April 1. Sale of small lots of bonds and other assets probably will Increase the total *to be divided in dividends to $334,000. the figure necessary to made a 10 per cent dividend.

Entered a§ Second-Class Matter at I

WRECKAGE OFF MAINE COAST MAY REVEAL FATE OF FUER AND GIRL IN BRITISH PLANE

Coast Guards Are Told of Yellow Floatsam Near Old Orchard. OVERDUE FOR 24 HOURS Chance That Machine May Be Safe in Remote Spot Only Hope Now. Bi/ United Press BIDDEFORD POOL. Maine, March 15. —Coast guards at the Fletcher’s Neck Station here said they had been informed that yellow wreckage was floating about five miles off Old Orchard Beach. According to trite coast guards, the wreckage had been sighted by fishermen who reported to the station. Boats were immediately sent out to search for the flotsam. The Stinson-Detroiter plane Endeavor in which Capt. Walter Hinchliffe and Miss Elsie Mackay attempted a trans-Atlantic flight was black and gold. Secrecy Blocks Rescue By United Press NEW YORK, March 15.—The secrecy under which Capt. Walter Hinchliffe, one-eyed flier, and the Hon. Elsie Mackay, pretty, titled British heiress, attempted to fly the Atlantic Ocean from England to the United States, today defeated the calculations of those who might have gone to their rescue, t The aviators at the numerous flying fields around New' York expressed doubt that any relief planes would be sent out to search for the Endeavor because so little was known of Hinehliffe’s proposed route. Officials at Mitchell field have abandoned hope for the sight’s success. The Endeavour now' is more than twenty-four hours overdue over the American continent, had it taken the northern route coming in by way of Newfoundland. At Curtiss Field it was pointed out that previous Atlantic flights had started with all the benefits of publicity. Ships along the route were notified and tentative schedules of the flights were drawn up in advance. Many Unfounded Rumors The Hinchliffe plans, however, were kept secret, presumably at the request of Miss Mackav, who did not want her family to worry. For that reason any ships which may have been along the route of the Endeavor were not on the look-out for the plane. many rumors that the airplane Endeavor—in which the Hon. Elsie Mac Kay and Captain Walter Hinchliffe were flying—had landed. But dawn found none of these rumors confirmed and belief grew that the plane had ended its flight somewhere in the vicious waters of the north Atlantic. The various reports of a landing, or of the plane being sighted, came from Newfoundland. Nova Scotia, the Boston airport and New Jersey. Reports Prove False An airplane was heard passing over the Boston airport about 9:30 p. m. and hope grew that the flight had been successful. But hour after hour passed and there was no word to substantiate the belief that the motor roar was that of Hinchcliffe’s plane. During the night there was a report that an airplane had landed near Menlo Park, N. J. This is near the Hadley field airmail station and the report was believed to have started shortly after the night air mail plane from Cleveland landed at the field. No other planes landed there during the night. The one remaining chance today was that the plane had landed safely, but that the two fliers had been unable to communicate with the outside. In this event it might be days before their safety was known. It seemed more likely, however, that the Endeavor had followed the course of the other planes that had started on westward trans-Atlantic flights, and would never again be heard from.

REED ASKS NEW TRIAL Love Bomber Claims Demonstrations Influenced Jury. Bat United Press OTTAWA. 111., March 15.—Courtroom demonstrations, not evidence, influenced the jury to convict Hiram Reed for the dynamiting of Pleasant Valley schoolhouse, a petition for new trial, filed by Reed’s attorneys, charged. Reed, son of a wealthy farmer, was found guilty of bombing a schoolhouse and almost causing the death of his former sweetheart, lola Bradford. LEVINE'S PLANE DOWN Dense Fog Forces Landing of Machine on Georgia Island. Bt) United Press ST. SIMONS ISLAND, Ga., March 15.—Charles A. Levine’s Bellanca monoplane, Columbia, was forced down here today while en route from Jacksonville to Njw York. Dense fog, according to Pilot Wilmer Stultz, necessitated the landing. Miss Mabel 801 l was the third occupant of the plane.

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Man Believed on Ocean Hop With Hinchliffe Found in London. HIDES FROM PUBLICITY. Gives Up Place In Dash to U. S. So Titled Girl Can Go. B !t United Press LONDON, March 15.—Two groups waited apprehensively today as hour by hour sped by without word of the airplane Endeavor, in which Capt. Walter Hinchliffe and the | Hon. Miss Elsie Mackay attempted a trans-Atlantic flight. At the home of the titled British woman, word was awaited as to the fate of the pretty and adventurous daughter of Lord Inchcape. Her parents are in Egypt. In the suburbs at Hinchliffa’s home, there was another anxious group, including Mrs. Hinchliffe, Gordon Sinclair, who was to have been in the plane, had been at the Hinchliffe house much of the night. The Hinchliffe group asked news. Dapers and press associations repeatedly for information concerning the flight attempt. ! Sinclair Is Located Sinclair was found last night. He had intended to accompany Hinchliffe, but gave way to Miss Mackay’s desires to be the first woman to fly across the Atlantic. A United Press correspondent talked with him on the telephone. “I assure you that Miss Mackay positively is aboard the Endeavor,” he said. “The reason for the secrecy was because she requested I remain in the background for a time to allay the anxiety of her relatives. But now a long time has elapsed and I can come to light again. “When the airplane departed I returned immediately to London and did not return to my wife. I remained at an obscure hotel. “Hinchliffe carried between 450 and 500 gallons of gasoline, sufficient for about forty-five hours in the air. Girl Adventurous Type The reason that promoted the pretty British girl to make the hazardous flight was not forthcoming today, other than that she might have done it for a thrill She is talented, has great social position and her father—Lord Inchcape—is one of Britain’s greatest ship owners. Always she has been an adventurous sort. During the war she eloped and married an actor. She was cut off by her faipily. Later the marriage was annuled and she returned to her father’s home. She was an accomplished horsewoman, a good interior decorator and one of Britains most noted women airplane pilots. Hinchliffe served In the royal air force during the war and lost one eye in an engagement. Afterwards he entered commercial aviation. NABBED ON OLD CHARGE Man’s House Raided for Liquor Eighteen Months Ago. Although he changed his residence about eighteen months ago when police raided his house at 926 Church St., during his absence, and foetid seventeen quarts of white mule whisky William (Jack) Ross is in city prison tqday charged with possession. Hearing of the raid, Ross never returned home, police said. He ha* since lived at an address on Illinois St. Sergt. John Eisenhut saw him at 1001 S. Senate Ave. Wednesday night and placed him under arrest on the old charge. SEIZE SLOT MACHINES Police Continue Raids on Alleged Gaming Devices. Police, continuing their drive on owners of slot machines used for gambling purposes, seized three machines Wednesday night from Eddia Holtkemeyer, 410 E. Washington St.; John Bozis, 59 Virginia Ave, and Clarence Flick, 1021 Virginia Avei. Holtkemeyer was arrested.

Nobody’s Girl Starts Today ‘ i The Times You will like "Nobody'* Girl,” and you will want to fight her. battles for her. And you will want to cry and to love when she does, too. "Nobody's Girl,*' by Anne Austin, starts today in The Indianapolis Times on Page One, of Section Two. Once you have started reading , this all-absorbing tale, you will keep right on to the end of the last chapter. Sally, the heroine, goes through many exciting adventures and romances before an unexpected happening ends the story. If you want many thrills, turn to "Nobody’s Girl* Page One, Section Two.