Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 16 August 1938 — Page 17

DUTLINES PLANS FOR “TENT CITY’, 6. 0, P. RALLY|

McKinley Republican Club To Hear Noland Wright Tomorrow Night.

Declaring the, New, Deal: is’ “making guinea . pigs of the people,” Homer E. Capehart, Buffalo, N. Y., Republican : campaigner,’ outlined plans for - his: huge : “tent. city”: G. O. P. rally on his farms inp Daviess County, Aug. 27, before the Irvington Republican Club last night. - He said’ his “eornfield: rally” will formally open the G.:O. P. national campaign for Congressional seats as well as touch off the first guns in the Indiana drive. “I'm sick and tired of listening fo business men. and others cuss the New Deal and do nothing about if,” he said. : “The New: Deal, just as everything that is. fundamentally wrong, will fall of its own weight, but wé must get in and pitch today and kill the New Deal before it kills us.”

Expects 8500: Guests

He said his rally near Washington, Ind., will be held under 38 tents with a spread of 100,000 square feet of canvas and that 8500 Republican workers, mostly Hoosiers, will be guests at a five-course chicken dinner. Mr. Capehart, who ‘is Rudolph Wurlitzer Co. vice president, said he ._“couldn’t afford .it,” but added that “we can’t beat those Democrats with firecrackers.” Many prominent as wn can leaders were introduced at the meeting’ by Ralph Hamill, gton Club, president. ! ...Mr, Capehart was introduced by Felix McWhirter, Indiana Republican Committee treasurer,

Wright Will Address *; McKinley G. O..P. Club Noland Wright, Anderson, newly appointed chairman of the Young Republicans Organization of Indiana, will address the McKinley Republican Club at 8 p. m. tomorrow at the clubrooms, 2217 E. Michigan St. Mr. Wright is the former . 11th District Young Republican chairman. Also on the program will be John D. Hughes, Indianapolis attorney and executive secretary of the Indiana Young Republicans, and Ralph Hamill, the Marion County group chairman. President G. K. Johnson will preside.

8-YEAR-OLD GIRL NAMES VAGRANT

Father and Brother Help in Playground ‘Arrest.

Identified by an 8-year-old North Side girl as the man who made advances to her last Friday, a 62-year-

old man was held for investigation by police today. The girl said the man approached her -and a playmate at the Fall Creek Playground. He did not harm her, she said. Officers charged him with vagrancy. The girl's father and her 12-year-old brother aided police in making the identification and arrest. Two other small children were seized by two men several days ago in another public park but were released when they screamed and attracted the attention of a passerby. Officers today investigated three cases of vandalism and .a series of thefts that cost Indianapolis residents more than $700. They charged Helen Wilkerson, 30, of 208 Park Ave. with murder in connection with the fatal stabbing of Fred Smith on Aug. 7. He ied at City Hosfital late yesteray.

Three merchants reported that

rocks were thrown through windows of their establishments. They were John Sams, 617 Park Ave. operator of a garage at 614 E. Vermont St.; Humphrey Marshall, owner of a plumbing shop at 306 E. St. Joe St., and Glenn Hadley, 1934 Reisner St., owner of the Hadley Electric Co., 642 E. Market St. A silver. fox fur “valued at $150 _ was taken from the home of Maomi Potts, 231 8. Temple Ave. she told detectives.

While he watched a demonstra- BE. AUTY- MART Forced to Expand Again!

380

tion in the window of a downtown store, pickpockets took his .billfold containing about $5, Chris Burton, 61, of 650 Ft. Wayne Ave, told police.

PONY THROWS GIRL INTO MOWER BLADES

Roberta Fuller, Tr. 14, © of Greenfield, was in a serious condition at Methodist Hospital today suffering from cuts about the head and neck after she was thrown from hei pony into the blades of a mowing machine near Greenfield yesterday. Earl McClarnon, who was driving the mower for the County High-

. way Department, said the girl had

just ridden her pony onto State . Road 9 When the accident occurred.

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CITY READY FOR LEGION ADVANCE

Final Plans Completed for Annual Convention .Starting Saturday.

Final plans for the 20th annual convention of the Indiana Department of the American Legion were completed today and. Indianapolis awaited the arrival of delegates who will be the city’s guests Saturday to Tuesday inclusive. Also meeting will be the 19th annual convention of the Indiana Department, American Legion Auxiliary, the 17th Grande Promenade, Indiana Grande Voiture, Forty and Eight; the 13th Grande March, Indiana Salon Departemental, Forty and Eight; and the fourth annual convention of the Indiana Detachment, Sons of the American Legion.

* Annual Banguet Monday

The convention will be featured by the annual drum and bugle corps competition Sunday in Perry Stadium; the convention parade through downtown streets at 2 p. m. Monday, and the annual banquet at the Claypool Monday evening. Officers will be elected Tuesday, after which the conveneion will disband. Officers said a special membership drive is in progress in the hope that the Indiana “Department will have a record number of members at the end of the convention. The four announced candidates for state commander of the Legion to succeed Russell R. Rhodes of Peru, are William Hyland, Evansville, Harold A. Shindler; Newburgh; Dr. O. T. Turflinger, Bloomington, and John A. - Watkins, Bloomfield.” All have held high offices in the Legion. Mrs. Gladys Huckleberry, Salem, is the only announced candidate to succeed Mrs. Marie Behmer, Logansport, as. president of the Auxiliary. ;

FIRST LADY TO OPEN 2D YOUTH CONGRESS

POUGHKEEPSIE, N. Y., Aug. 16 (U. P.)~—The second World Youth Congres opens on the Vassar College campus today with an organization meeting of the United States groups which are acting as hosts to delegates from 55 foreign countries. Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt and Dr. Henry Noble MacCracken, president of Vassar College, will address the 500 delegates, representing 40,000,000 young people throughout the world. The delegates will meet in committee sessions until next Tuesday when general sessions will be conducted. The Sn ends Aug. 24.

Six Streets at

New Augusta Will Be Paved

New Augusta will be out of the mud by Christmas. - The grading, draining and blacktopping of six streets in and around the town will be started this week. The work is part of a Countywide road improvement program sponsored,k County Commissioners with WPA “Sabor. In -addition to the New Augusta streets, the Commissioners announced that nine other roads had been turned over ‘to the WPA for grading and draining preparatory to black-topping. Only the New Augusta streets will be black-topped this fall as money is available only for materials for a few miles of paving. Streets to be paved at New Augusta are: Coffman Road between Tlst and 74th Sts.; Pollard Road, 71st to 74th St.; Dobson Road, Tlst to 74th St.; 72d St. from Coffman Road to the Big Four Railroad; 73d St. from Coffman Road to Dobson St.; 74th St. from Coffman Road to Dobson St.

SELEGTING JURY FOR ‘GRIME CAREER’ TRIAL

Attorney for, Ea Easton May Advance Insanity Plea.

MICHIGAN CITY, Aug. 16 (U. P.) —Attorneys today continued to question prospective jurors as they sought to complete a panel of 12 jurors and two alternates to hear the trial of Orelle Easton, 25-year-old North Dakota farm hand accused of fatally wounding State Policeman Ray Dixon last June. Eleven jurors were selected tentatively yesterday. A plea of insanity probably will be advanced for Easton, defense counsel Paul Krueger indicated. Easton’s mother broke down and sobbed yesterday when her son was led into court shackled to a deputy sheriff. Her husband calmed her. Easton and his brother, Clarence, 27, who was shot to death by an Illinois posse after Officer Dixon was wounded, left their North Dakota farm home for a “crime career.” It ended with the shooting of Officer Dixon when he stopped at their stalled automobile to offer them assistance. Orelle blames Clarence for the killing.

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[FEENEY CALLED IN VOTE PROBE

Recount Winner. in Sheriff Race First Witness Before Grand Jury. .

Al Peeney, ‘who :won' the Demo-: cratic ‘sheriff nomination in a re2ount of votes recently, testified for more than two hours ' before . the Grand Jury today concerning alleged primary ballet frauds. He was the first witness fo testify formally before the jury regarding discrepancies found during the recount of Democratic sheriff ballots which showed variations totaling more than 2500 votes. Charley . Lutz, originally certified

4 as the sheriff nominee by the Pri-

mary Election Board and who was nosed out by Mr. Feeney in the recount, also will be subpenaed to testify later this week, Prosecutor Herbert M. Spencer said. : Others who will be called before the jury in the next few days include Sheriff Ray, defeated for the Democratic mayoralty nomination, members of the recount boards and precinct poll workers who are reported to have first hand information about alleged “juggling of ballots.” Discrepancies Reported

Recount commissioners repeatedly put into records bf Circuit Court their findings that “many ballots in this precinct appeared to have been marked by persons other than the voter.”

This record was made in at least |

50 precincts, during recount of Democratic sheriff ballots. Mr. Feeney charged repeatedly during the recount that ballots were mutilated -deliberately by persons other than the voters in many precincts. Sheriff Ray, who petitioned a recount of Democratic mayoralty

votes but failed to overcome the

wide lead given Reginald Sullivan, the nominee, has asserted he has “more than 100 affidavits from precinct workers who will testify that they saw irregularities during the counting of ballots.” He will be given an opportunity to present these to the Grand Jury, Mr. Spencer said.

G-MEN CAPTURE TWO DESPERARDES

ST. PAUL, “Minn. finn, Aug. 16 @. B2 —G-Men : here sinounced that they had captured Otis bind Meredith and John Couch, South-

‘west desperadoes, after a gun fight

in which Meredith = was wounded near here early toclay. The men were taken “at a farm house . nine miles east of Grand Rapids, Minn. "Federal men said they: were identified from ‘photographs ‘as the: pair that forced Daniel Cox: Fahey: and Cecilia Cross of St. Louis to. drive them into Minnesota late Saturday.

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