Indianapolis Times, Volume 40, Number 74, Indianapolis, Marion County, 16 August 1928 — Page 1
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STATE G.O.P. WORRIED OVER DIVIDED!* Confidence of Hoover Win Tempered by Concern for Indiana Slate. THREE DISTINCT GROUPS Rogers Announces Personnel of Two Important Committees. Confidence of Indiana Republican leaders for sweeping victory for Herbert C. Hoover, Presidential nominee, was tempered with frank concern for the fate of the State ticket, headed by Harry G. Leslie, gubernatorial nominee, when State committeemen, candidates and organization leaders conferred on Wednesday at the Severin. “Camp followers,” who. milled, about the lobby while conferred behind closed doors, were dismayed at the prospect of a campaign in which three distinct and mutually suspicious groups are intent on leadership: 1. The State committee and its “regular organization,” in which Senator James E. Watson remains the controlling factor despite the sallies of Arthur R. Robinson, junior Senator, who seeks re-election. Separate Leslie Office 2. Forces allied with Harry G. Leslie, nominee for Governor, who have opened separate headquarters adjoining State headquarters, ostensibly for effecting “close cooperation” with the State committee. Leaders in this camp are Bert C. Fuller, Leslie's primary campaign manager; Henry Marshall, Lafayette publisher, who engineered his nomination in the State convention; Bert Morgan, former deputy prohibition administrator for Indiana, whose overtures to Hoover forces in the primary for a Leslie-Hoover alliance were rejected, and Alfred E. Hogston. State fire marshal, whose offices in the Statehouse are j a frequent rendezvous for the Leslie ; crowd. 3. Hoover’s “out and out” primary friends, headed by Oscar G. Foellin- j ger, Ft. Wayne publisher, the presi-j . dential nominee’s Indiana primary manager, who announced headquarters will be opened here for an In- j diana Hoover-for-President organization in which Hoover’s primary organization will be re-enlisted for "cooperation with the State committee.” Committees Are Named Elza .0. Rogers, State chairman, with a perplexing job on his hands, announced the personnel jf two important committees aftei a conference with the campaign executive committee. Irving W. Lernaux, Indianapolis treasurer of the State committee, will head the finance committee which includes George Ball, Muncie manufacturer; James P. Goodrich, former Governor; Ralph Lemcke, Indianapolis, former county treasurer, and Enos Porter, Shelbyville manufacturer. Each district will have a representative. Those named Tuesday: Joseph Kelly, Mount Vernon, First district; Claude Mallott, Bloomington, Second; Will J. Irwin, Columbus. Fourth: Roy C. Shaneberger, Indianapolis, Seventh; Morris Ritchie. Lebanon, Ninth; Walter J. Riley, East Chicago, Tenth; Robert J. Spencer Jr., Marion, Eleventh; Maurice Fox, La Porte, Thirteenth. William Kleppinger, East Chicago, will head the business men’s committee, with a member from each district. Already named are W. W Cave, French Lick. Third district: Orville H. Platter. North Vernon, Fourth; John B. Schlosberg. Terre Haute, Fifth; C. E. Wilson, Anderson, Eighth; Carl f ims, Frankfort, Ninth; E. M. Wasmuth, Huntington, Eleventh; Peter McCray, Kendallville, Twelfth. Ogden Fears for Success John G. Brown of Monon, former Indiana Farm Bureau Federation president, was named to head the State committee’s farm bureau. Donald D. Goss, veteran newspaper man, now with the Security Trust Company, Indianapolis, was appointed chairman of the publicity bureau. —State candidates were one in declaring r.oover’s acceptance speech assured him the support of Indiana farmers, guaranteeing him a majority of 200,000 to 250,000 over Alfred E. Smith in the November election. James M. Ogden, local attorney, nominee for attorney general, was one of the candidates openly skeptical of the success of the Republican State ticket. He urged aggressive organization work to “sell the State ticket to the public.” Senator Watson sounded an appeal for full support for the whole ticket, State and national, and an end to quibbling.
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The Indianapolis Times Mostly fair tonight. Friday partly cloudy. Not much change in temperature.
VOLUME 40—NUMBER 74
DEATH STALKS LOVE
Woman Loses, but Claims Body
A BROKEN tryst had a tragic epilogue when Miss Jessie Hudson, farmer’s daughter from near Lebanon, Ind„ tip-toed sobbing into city hospital at dawn today, and identified a crushed, sheet-covered body as that of her fiance, George N. Arvanitis, 715 S. Meridian St. Arvanitis, 42, was killed when he drove his automobile, at a high rate of speed, into a T. H., I. & E freight car which had halted at Northwestern Ave. and ThirtyFourth St., at 8:30 p. m. Wednesday. Arvanitis was driving west, toward the Lebanon Rd., which would take him to the farmhouse where his bride-to-be was waiting. Miss Hudson did not learn of the accident until late Wednesday night. She was at the hospital before sun-up. Arvanitis, officials
PLANE OVER CANADA IN HOP TO SWEDEN
3-Day Grace Bn United Press NEWARK. N. J.. Aug. 16. The story ot how Theodore Roberts Corwin played about in the surf for three days with a broken neck became known to,day. He became paralyzed Sunday after his neck was broken three days previously, and despite efforts of seven doctors died Wednesday.
CLEW TO AMUNDSEN Believe July 1 Note in Bottle Is Genuine. Bn United Press LONDON Aug. 16.—A message found Sunday m a bottle off Rottumeroog. Rottumsland, today was! believed in some sources to have j been left by Roald Amundsen, the j Arctic explorer who was lost in an I attempt to find the crew of the di-1 rigible Italia A dispatch to the Daily Mail from the. Hague said that the Norwegian consul there had examined the message closely, compared the writing with that ol Amundsen, and had reached the belief the message was' genuine. The message read: “Latham, July 1, 1928, 84 degrees i 23 minutes east Roald Amundsen.” j NOTED FLIERS DELAYED! Men to Lead Antarctic Expedition j Will Arrive Friday. Because ot an accident to the | wing of their plane at Cincinnati, | Commander Douglas George Jeffrey j and Capt. Arthur Argles, who will j pilot an American Antarctic expedition this fall, were unable to come; to Indianapolis today as scheduled. A telegram received at Schoen field, Ft. Benjamin Harrison this morning, said the fliers would reach there Friday morning. The Jeffrey expedition will center on the Weddell Sea, charting its coast line and attempting to determine if the mountains of Graham land are a continuation in the Antarctic continent of the Andes of South America. Jeffrey is expected to stay here several days. LOST GEOLOGISTS SAFE lowa Students Located in Canada | Northwest. Bn United Press REGINA, Sasic., Aug. 16.—The j silence which for four weeks has | surrounded the fate of four Uni- i versity of lowa students making a j geological expedition into the North- | west territory, was broken today Corporal J. J. Malloy, mounted policeman of the Pelican Narrows station, reported that he had found the expedition at Lac Du Brochet and that the youths had reprovisioned and taken a short route to their objective, Driftwood Point, 300 miles north 01 Port Churchill on Hudson Bay. Malloy expressed the beliet the youths were not in t danger and should reach their destination. TEST SLAYER’S SANITY Father of Obregon Assassin Asks for Psycho-Analysis. Bn United. Press MEXICO CITY. Aug. 16.—The medical examination of Jose De Leon Toral, slayer of President-Elect Alvaro, now being made may include psycho-analysis at the petition of his father, Auraliano. His trial is not expected to start until October.
AGAINST the blackness of low scudding clouds a tiny speck of red moves like a vagrant star across the night sky. A shaft of lightning darts across the horizon revealing, momentarily, the wet silver of wing tips, and above the wail of the wind and the beat of the rain the staccato roar of a motor tells the airport that the night mail plane is winging in. The landing lights marking the field’s boundaries are flashed on and a postal employe stands by to receive the mail bags. Aloft, the pilot looks down upon a city almost obscured by rain and fog. He picks up the airport beacon as it revolves, throwing a long pencil of light around the skyline. The electric bulbs of the port are partially veiled by the elements. Undaunted, the pilot noses his plane down; flicks on the landing lights set upon his wings. The earth comes up—rapidly-r-to meet him.
thought, had no friends or relatives in this country. They were thinxing of a county burial. But Miss Hudson, cheated by tragedy, was not to be denied the consolation of according her suitor proper burial. “I met George in Indianapolis and we came to love each other,” she told O. H. Baicemeier, deputy coroner. “He had no relatives in this country, but his father, three sisters and a brother live in Greece. “Frequently I paid the premiums on his life insurance, which, he told me, was made to his estate and should go to his people back in Greece. “But I want his body—let me take it to Lebanon. The request was granted and the body was taken to the Bratton funeral parlors at Lebanon today.
Weather Conditions Ideal for First Leg of ThreeStop Dash for Illinois. Bn United Press ROCKFORD. 111.. Aug. 16.—Bert R. Hassell, piloting the StinsonDetroiter monoplane. ‘Greater Rockford,” in an attempt to make the first crossing of the Atlantic from the Middle West left the United States and passed into Canada today. Hassell, who left here at 6:45 a. m. today flew above Whitefish Point (Mich.) at 10:58 a. m., according to radio advices received here and a few minutes later was over eastern Ontario. Weather reports said flying conditions were excellent. Hassell and Parker D. Cramer, his navigator, were attempting to make Cochrane, Ont., first of three stops on the route to Stockholm. At 9:30 a. m. they had been sighted at Sturgeon Bay <Wis.) and twenty minutes later at Manistique, Mich. Refuel Plane Tonight Hassell and Cramer expected to lefuel the plane tonight at Cochrane. They will stay there over night and granted continued favorable weather will leave at dawn for Mount Evans, Greenland, the second stop. The third stop is planned at Reykjavig. Iceland. The plane carried 200 gallons fuel for its first leg of flight, a distance of 750 miles. Hassell and Cramer made a previous start for Sweden on July 26, but after fifteen minutes of flying the heavily loaded plane was unable to gain altitude, and it crashed in a cornfield. Both fliers escaped injury, and the damaged plane was sent to the Stinson factory at Detroit for immediate repairs. This time it was decided to start with a lighter load of gasoline and make the flight with three stops, instead of one, to avoid possibility of another crash. Weather Conditions Ideal The trip to Stockholm will be nearly 3,000 miles long, but the longest water jump—that from Reykjavik to the coast of Norway, is only 514 miles. Backers of the flight contend this route because of its safety and practicability, will be the one eventually adopted by establishes of regular trans-Atlantic passenger service. The Greater Rockford is equipped with radio and expects to keep in touch with land and ship stations throughout the flight. Weather reports today indicated Hassell and Cramer would encounter ideal flying conditions over Canada HELD AS GAS HAWK Slashes One of Two Captors With Knife, Police Charge. Charles Reynolds, 39, of 953 Birch Ave., alleged gas hawk, faces charges of assault and battery with intent to kill, drunkenness, and driving while drunk. Austin Clark, 637 Birch Ave., and George Castor, same address, said Reynolds was trying to get two girl pedestrians into his car at Drover St. and Oliver Ave. When Reynolds got out of his machine and started toward the girls, they grabbed him, the two men said. Reynolds fought and i Castor was cut across the abdomen with a knife. ‘Fireman Save The Cat’ tin United Press BLOOMFIELD. N. J„ Aug. 16. A nameless black and white cat became wedged between two buildings and its screams attracted so much attention that the fire department was called out to remove it.
LEARN HOW TO FLY—THE TIMES WILL TELL YOU TRICKS OF THE AIR TRADE
INDIANAPOLIS, THURSDAY, AUG. 16,1928
G. T. WHELDEN IS NAMED TO PLANAMT Realtor Heads Committee to Recommend Equipment Cost, Maintenance. REPORT TO CITY CHIEFS i Two Other Groups May Be Named Today to Draft Sky Program. George T. Whelden, member of | the Real Estate Board and the Chamber of Commerce industrial commission, today was named chairman of a committee to recommend cost of equipment and maintenance of a municipal airport by ;A. Kiefer Mayer, chamber indusj trial commission chairman. Wheldenis committee and one on site and prices and one on finances i are to recommend to city council a plan for acquisition and maintenance of an Indianapolis municipal airport. Appointment of committees was authorized at a meeting of the joint city-Chamber of Commerce airport board luncheon Wednesday. Site to Be Obtained Other members of Whelden’s committee named by Mayer arc: Col. E. S. Gorrell. aviation officer during the war; Capt. H. Weir Cook, regular army officer assigned as Indiana National Guard flying instructor; Frank Sparks, president ! Noblett-Sparks Company, and George Steinmetz. manager of the local Ford assembly plant. Mayer said he expected to complete personnel of the committees late today or Friday. Herman P. Lieber, councilman, told the committee Mayor Slack desired a committee of citizens make preliminary negotiations for a site, secure options and figures on cost, and then to make recommendations to the'City. Haste Is Necessary Haste is imperative if funds arc to be included in the 1929 budget. Lieber said, as the budget is to be advertised next week. He added both the mayor and council members are opposed to dual ownership of an airport, believing it should be strictly a municipal affair. A $500,000 municipal bond issue, William H. Book, Chamber ot Commerce civic affairs director, reported, would require an annual levy of $.0115 for twenty years. AL PREPARES REPLY Prepares Answer to Attack by Kansas Editor. Bn i nitrd Press ALBANY, N. Y., Aug. 16.—Governor A.fred E. Smith's forthcoming reply to the charges of William Allen White. Kansas editor, will be a complete and vigorous defense of his legislative record which White attacked. Smith said today he had completed his reply to White a few days ago, but that he was making some changes as a result of the editor's cablegram from abroad, in which White revived charges he previously partially withdrew.
RAIL STRIKE MAY TAKE JOBS FROM 300 HERE
Three hundred Illinois Central employes In Indianapolis will be thrown out of work, officials estimated today, if the wage dispute between trainmen and eight railroads results in a strike on which 35.000 members of the Brotherhood of Railway Trainmen and the Brotherhood of Railway Conductors now are voting. The Illinois Central, alone of railroads entering Indianapolis, is involved in the dispute. Headquarters for the branches of the two brotherhoods, which include the employes here, are located in Palestine, 111. Results of the strike poll are to be announced at brotherhood offices in Cleveland Sept. 2. Approximately 100 conductors, brakemen and enginemen here directly would be affected by the strike order, said William Ward, local Illinois Central agent. But another 100 in the local shops and 100 in the freight house would be thrown out of work, he said, if the strike tied up operation of the trains. The brotherhoods are asking increases of 10 per cent for yardmen
The wheels touch the ground the plane skids in the mud. wobbles | across the field, rights itself and taxies to the hangars. The pilot encumbered by his parachute packs, climbs out. checks j in his mail, inspects his plane and re-enters the cockpit. ... A bad i night for flying—but the airmail must be carried. a tt a * IS this pilot safe as he flies through the night with all the elements battering against his wings? Os what are airplanes made that they j withstand such service? Are airplanes safe and successful as vehicles of transportation? Why does a plane fly? How are they taken off and landed? And. finally, what is aircraft, from a commercial standpoint, worth to the country? . All these questions, and others, are answered by Malcolm J.^Bu-
Rival Politicians Play—2o Miles Apart
JM|F - - v J^Jj -•, JP y DRY GOVERNOR W ■ CERTAIN IN OHIO f -Ivers Y. Cooper, Cincinnati tealtor, j , tepublican. and Congressman Mar- / in L. Davey of Kent. Democrat, : : ook the nominations for Governor IcS't f Ohio at Tuesday’s primary elec- \ ... V \ ion. • iiiwiwiiiniiwiiimtii)Jin r"iiirrrmn^'
m GOVERNOR CERTAIN IN OHIO Wet Candidates Lose in Primary Vote. Bn United Press COLUMBUS, Ohio, Aug. 16. Myers Y. Cooper, Cincinnati realtor, Republican, and Congressman Martin L. Davey of Kent. Democrat, took the nominations for Governor of Ohio at Tuesday’s primary election. • Cooper won the Republican nomination with an unofficial majority of 5,665 over Congressman James T. Begg of Sandusky, while Davey polled a 25,000 majority over his nearest opponent. Peter Witt, former Cleveland councilman and A1 Smith supporter. Congressman Theodore E. Burton of Cleveland won the Republican short term senatorial nomination over Judge Carrington T. Marshall of Zanesville. Burton's majority will aggregate 130,000. United States Senator Simeon D. Fess was unopposed for the Republican long-term senatorial nomination. Charles V. Truax, State director of agriculture, defeated former Congressman George White, Marietta, by 10,000 for the Democratic shortterm nomination. Graham P. Hunt, Cincinnati modificationist advocate, won the Democratic long term nomination, with a majority of 10,000 over United States Senator Cyrus Locher. With the one exception of Hunt, dry advocates were swept to victory in the primary.
and 18 per cent for trainmen. They refused the 7.5 per cent increase offered by the railroads contingent upon abolition of certain working rules. FORECAST HEAT BREAK Lower Temperatures in Sight Along Atlantic Seaboard. lilt United Press NEW YORK, Aug. IS.—Relief was forecast for the East today from the high temperatures that resulted in new prostration and casualties Wednesday. The temperature rose to 90 degrees in New York, 2 degrees below the seasonal high, and elsewhere along the Atlantic seaboard temperatures as high as 94 degrees were reported. Five Killed by Lightning Bn United Press GRENOBLE, France, Aug. 16. Five are dead and several badly shocked as a result of lightning striking a high tension wire at Arandon near here. Many animals were killed.
Entered as Second-Class Matter at Postoffice, Indianapolis
Separated by twenty miiea. rival political camps, the Democrats and Republicans, picnicked Wednesday. The followers of A1 Sn Rh ate chicken and tossed horseshoes at Walnut Gardens, fourteen miles southwest of the city, while the Marion County employes. Republican almost to a man, tasted watermelon at Broad Ripple Park. The upper picture is of Democrats. It shows .(left to right), Albert Stump, Indianapolis, nominee for United States Senator; Charles • Buck) Sumner sheriff nominee, and State Senator Curtis Shake, Vincennes, nominee for attorney general. The other two photographs show county Republicans at play. Harry Dunn, county auditor, is at the lower left, behind a piece of chicken. Center, left to right, are George O. Hutsell, county clerk, and Clyde R. Robinson, county treasuifr. Below, Miss Frances Sheehan, depunty in the Barrett law department, is trying a slice of watermelon. while Mrs. Hutsell is holding her plate of lunch.
BLONDE ‘STENOG’ WITH MIRROR CHIEF WORRY OF FLAGPOLE STANDER
“Well, that's over,” said Alvin (Shipwreck) Kelly this morning as he stretched his arms and legs on precarious perch atop the Denison Hotel flagpole, in evident relief that the second night of his 100 hours, 13 minutes, 13 seconds vigil had passed. “The second sleepless night is always the worst,” said “Shipwreck,” who took up his lofty watch Tuesday at 9 a. m. “I could, of course, enjoy a little nap if I was off here —but I can wait till Staurday.” Kelly, famed endurance athlete, expects to descend from the thir-teen-inch disc at the tip of the eighteen-foot flagpole Saturday at 1:13 p. m. Then he will go to the Lyric Theater for a stage appearance and next to Walnut Gardens for an athlete exhibition. “I wish that blonde stenographer who stood in a window across there from 2 o’clock until sundown Tuesday, reflecting the sun’s rays in my eyes with a mirror, had more work to do," Kelly observed. “That was a bit disconcerting!” “Pedestrians who stand at Pennsylvania and Ohio Sts. gaping at the figure silhouetted against the sky, look like flies about a lump of sugar on a table cloth,” to Kelly, he said. Neighborhood merchants have taken a kindly interest in “Shipwreck’s” situation and frequently send him orange juice, soup and cigarets. Kelly’s seconds, in constant attendance on the roof at the end of a rope with which the athlete draws
chanan in a series of articles starting in The Times Tuesday, Aug. 21. Buchanan is a newspaper man and an experienced pilot. Asa captain of the 28th Pursuit Squadron hb flew on the western front during the World War; he saw action over the lines: he met the German pilots in the air; he bombed lines of communication far back of the German trenches. / He is now a member of the editorial staff of the Ft. Worth (Tex.) Press And in view of the interest in aviation aroused throughout the country during the past year he has written this series of articles to explain as nearly as possible in the layman’s language the construction operation and value of modern aircraft and the training of a pilot. The first chapter will be printed in this newspaper beginning Tuesday.
up his liquid lunches, said “Kid” Chissell, local welterweight, has been selected for a bout with Kelly immediately on his descent. The bout will be staged either at the Lyric or at Walnut Gardens. Kelly’s manager continued efforts today to obtain a plane on which Kelly proposes to stand at the end of a flagpole while the plane speeds seventy-five to one hundred miles an hour at his Walnut Gardens’ exhibition. TAX CUT PREDICTED $.015 Reduction in City Rate Held Likely. Reduction of about $.015 in the proposed $1.15 tax levy for the city next year appeared likely today. It was understood slices made by members of the city council’s finance committee will bring the levy down this much and perhaps more. Councilmen who have been studying the budget declared no definite idea of the amount of the reduction could be announced until the entire group of proposals were reconsidered. The committee will meet with the recreation and city hospital departments Friday. These will be the concluding departmental meetings. Hourly Temperatures 7a.m. .. 68 11 a. m 82 Ba. m 70 12 (noon).. 82 9 a. m.... 74 1p.m.... 83 10 a. m 79
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GRAVE DANGER TO U. S. SEEN IN NAVY PACT Coolidge Sends Rush Cali to Admiral for Parley on New Draft. AIM SLAP AT AMERICA French and British Frame Agreement for Freezeout on Uncle Sam. BY MAURITZ A. HALLGREN United Press Staff Correspondent WASHINGTON. Aug. 16.—Perturbed over the possibility that the recently announced Franco-British naval agreement may have been intended to curb American sea strength, President Coolidge has called Admiral Charles F. Hughes, chief of naval operations, to the summer White House at Brule, Wis., to explain the compromise to him in expert terms, it was learned today. Officials here admittedly are concerned seriously over the antiAmerican implication in the agreement, and it is known that this concern has been communicated to the President. Secretary of State Kellogg has suggested that the question Is so delicate he can not discuss it publicly until Mr. Coolidge has had opportunity to study it. Will Present Views Hughes is expected to see the President today or tomorrow. It is presumed he not only will present his own views, but will pass on to Mr. Coolidge the opinions of Rear Admiral Andrew T. Long and Commander H. C. Train, both of whom have devoted the last fortnight to an intensive study of the British note which contains a resume of the naval compromise. While terms of the compromise still are kept secret, it has been indicated here and in Europl that under it France and Great Britain have agreed among other things to support a program at the next preparatory disarmament conference at Geneva which will place no limitation on small cruisers and on submarines displacing 600 tons or less. The American policy calls for definite limitation on all cruiser tonnage. Would Limit Cruisers The Franco-British plan would limit only the 10,000-ton cruisers, which the American navy wants, and placed no limitation on smaller cruisers, which the United States does not want, but which the British say they need to protect their shipping. The American delegation to the preparatory conference, which is expected to be called in October or November, again will be headed by Hugh S. Gibson, ambassador to Belgium, it was said today. RIDES CHAIR TO~S?E AL Crippled Veteran Completes 200Mile Trip Alone. Bn United Press ALBANY. N. Y., Aug. 16.—Albert J. Brady, Dorchester, Mass., a crippled World War veteran, today came to the end of a 200-mile trip which he traveled In his wheel chair, and will attain the ambition which he has cherished for ten years—an interview with Governor A1 Smith. He made the trip over bad roads and good, through sunshine and storm. Before he left he made a wager he would reach Albany and shake Smith’s hand. He will see the Governor late today. TUNNEY SAILS TODAY Fiancee Will Bid Him Goodby, Is Report. B.u United Press NEW YORK. Aug. 16.—0n the same ship with J. P. Morgan and members of the banker’s family. Gene Tunney sails today for Europe, where he will go an a walking tour with Thornton Wilder, novelist. Reports were current in New York that Miss Mary Josephine Lauder, the heiress whose engagement to Tunney recently was announced, would be in New York to bid bon voyage to the former heavyweight boxing champion. Tunney will sail on the Mauretania. which leaves at 5 p. m. SETS UP G. 0. P. RULES Rogers Restricts Women, Bars Liquor at State Headquarters. Political circles chuckled today over “three commandments,” laid down by Elza O. Rogers, Republican State chairman, at the meeting of men and women party leaders at the Severin Wednesday, for conduct of headquarters in the hotel. Chairman Rogers said: “1. No religious discussion will be permitted on the part of the employes of the State organization. “2. No intoxicating liquor may be brought to the headquarters. "3. No women employes of the committee may visit sections of the hotel above the third floor (on which Republican headquarters are located) without permission of Miss Mary Sleeth, Rushville, vice chairman.”
