Second Section ifioOK mNook mmnm-.l Z-yr <-t-f* -] Warren Spencer The identity of the man behind the pen name of Warren Spencer, author of "Forever and Ever.’’ has been disclosed by his publishers to pe William C. Lengel, associate editor of Cosmopolitan magazine. wrote his first novel and published it under strict anonym ity to prove that unknown authors have a chance. u u a BY WALTER n. HICKMAN ON Paße 13 of "Captain Archer's Daughter,'’ you read that "in hrr comfortable home Miss Archer dreamed through the cold goodness of her twenties." And in the same paragraph, you will be startled to read —"Then sud denly without word of warning, without rousing the slightest suspi cion in Bowport or in the mind of the kind father Miss Martha Arch er not only kicked up her heels but she jumped the fence of propriety and vanished down the primrose path." And then this—"One dav she. was an old maid whose perfection scared ofl every man who came, near her. The. next, she was sailing away with one of the deni's seed, to find a parson to tie the knot.” Now, I believe, you know' a great deal about. Martha, the "heroine” of Margaret Deland's new novel, "Cap tain Archer's Daughter." published by Harper & Brothers, and sells for $2.50. Here is a story of Captain Archer, w ho made, his home in Bowport, on the New England coast, and of his daughter Martha, who was too “carefully” reared by her mother when very young. Martha had one successfu rebel lion when very young. She hurled a hymn book at a very strait-laced minister while he was preaching. But the scandal that act created in no way compared to the fuss kicked up when Martha ran away with a sea captain. Isadore Davis. Davis was able to make many women feel “the scorch of the. blue fire” of his eyes. As the author describes him—“this handsome man was not only as elemental as a flame; he was as vulgar as honest earth.” And this man made Martha love as she never dreamed of love; forced her to terrible suffering and then compelled her to return to Bowport with her son, Young Cap, and became a chaste icicle. And does Young Cap inherit the ‘‘blue fire” of his father? Read "Captain Archer's Daugh ter.” It is beautifully and honestly written. Those who are interested in books concerning Abraham Lincoln will be. interested in “What Lincoln Read," recently published by the Pioneer Publishing Company at Washing ton, D. C. This book connects Lin coln's life story with his studies and reading. It sells for $5. a a a Vhat are they reading in New Y-.k? Brentano's lists the follow ing: “A Modern Hero,” by Louis Bromfield: “Summer Holiday," by Sheila Kaye-Smith; “Undertow.” by A. Hamilton Gibbs; "The Black Swan,” by Rafael Sabatini; “State Fair," by Phil Stong. and "The An swering Glory,” by R. C. Hutchin son. a a a Two books of first importance on the fall list of Houghton Mifflin Company include: "Severidge and the Progressiye Era," by Claude G. Bowers, and “Earth Horizon," by Mary Austin. The Bowers book, which follows the authors "The Tragic Era.” if based upon the ca reer of the late Albert J. Bever idge, and is. in its essence, a polit ical history of the United States from the Spanish war to the years following the World war. "Earth Horizon" is Mrs. Austin's long awaited biography. It is written with that exhiarating tonic which only struggle, achievement and a sense of humor can bring. a a a Novelists to appear this summer and fall on the Houghton Mifflin list for the first time include Janet Fairbank, Dorothy Speare. J. P. Mc- Evoy, Radclyffe Hall and Jonathan Leonard. The same firm will also publish new novels by Wallace Ir win, John Buchan, Sophia Cleugh. Henrietta Leslie. Roland Pertwee. Beatrice Grimehaw. Katharine New lin Burt and William MacLeod Raine. a a a DESIGNS for jackets of three books which Lippincott will publish in the early autumn have been made by Alexey Brodovitch, youthful Russian who is already famous as one of the leading post er artists of France. In 1925 at the Exhibition Internationale des Arts Decoratifs in Paris. Mr. Brod ovitch won highest honors; the Grand Prix for textile design and embroidery, the Grand Prix for jewelry and silverware design, two silver medals and honors for archi tecture. The three jackets are for "High Low' Washington” by 30 32; “The Perils and Fortune of the Duke of Osuna.” by Antonio Marichalar. and "Fuller’s Earth,” by Carolyn Wells. Fall Lmm(| Wlr* B*>rrW of the Doited Pre* AmocUHoe LuYAL PAIR OF ! WOMEN SAVE CURTIS’ CAUSE Vice-President’s Victory Is Due to Efforts of Sister and Mabel Willebrandt. MRS. GANN IS HEROINE Wages Whirlwind Battle to Keep Second Place for Her Brother. BY MAXINE DAVIS United Preit Staff Correspondent CHICAGO, June 17.—Two women did much to save Charles H. Curtis from the limbo of discarded Vice- I Presidents. His fighting sister. Mrs. Dolly Gann, carried on a campaign for months, with a driving whirlwind inish, to have Tim retained as •unning mate of President Hoo ver. Mabel Walker Wille bra ndt, heroine of 1928, and loyal despite differences with other members of the party, wsnt to bat when defeat seemed imminent for Curtis Thursday, helped prevail upon the Penn- a ' vmt Jr Mrs. Gann sylvania delegation to change its vote, and give the ageing Vice-Presi dent renomination. Curtis’ entire career has been af fected by the political loyalty and support of women. Mrs. Alvin T. Hcrt, vice-chairman of the Repub lican national committee, was large ly responsible for his place on the ticket four years ago, when she made a fight characteristically more effec tive than spectacular to name him as second on the Hoover slate. Sister Never Falls Him The corner stone of his whole life has been his sister's unfailing and militant support. She did not fail him here. At the close of a country wide speech-making campaign of months, she came to Chicago to cry*stallize and add backbone to his support. She began her work with in the hour of her arrival, and never ceased her frantic efforts un- til the balloting began. All during the convention she sat in her box, consoling, cajol ing, rallying re luctant delegates to her brother's banner. That she was fully aware of the serious ness of the situation often was re flected in her face. When nom- V Mrs. Willebrandt inations for Vice- President began, she leaned for ward with her hands on the railing, clasped so tight that they showed w’hite at the knuckles. Not until the Pennsylvania dele gation changed its vote did her face relax into a smile. When New York gave its tre mendous vote to General Harbord. Dolly saw' the years behind, all the years of struggle for her brother. First she was his secretary. She nursed his invalid wife, was a sec ond mother to his children, and climaxed her career of helpfulness in her Herculean fight for his re nomination. Chilly Toward Press Mrs. Gann and her husband were chilly toward the press after the "victory," and he complained that he had been called "Mr. Dolly Gann" and that Mrs. Gann had been “pestered.” Mrs. Gann at first indicated she would not comment, but finally ob served that she "never was worried about the result for one instant." Mrs. Willebrandt stepped sudden ly into the breach. She had planned to second Curtis’ nomination, but gave up this lip service for more practical activity. Her foray into the administration's battlefield was unexpected, for Mrs. Willebrandt claims she has given up politics. DIG DOWN IN THE OLD PURSE; TAX MAN IS COMING You’ll Pay $1.68 Monthly Under Uncle Sam’s New Schedule, Soon in Effect BY JAMES A. CARVIN THAT well-known citizen of Indianapolis, Mr. Average Man, whose birth, clothing, food, work, pleasure and even death are subjected to statistical analysis at regular intervals, will find after the new general revenue bill be comes effective Tuesday, that his cost of living has been increased 5 cents a day. Under provisions of the new The snob 'SHE Jp-'L Thinks she's so %C J NECESSARY p DBIAL Q IcREA*7P 1 gg; lav, approximately $1.68 will be paid each month for the everyday items of living, not taking into ac count more than a dozen divisions in Qte law where the citizen is The Indianapolis Times ZOO ANIMALS HIDE HATE, KILL IN FLASH Mask Blood Lust for Months, Then Yield to Murder Impulse BY WILLIAM ENGLE Time* Stiff Writer 'Coomfht. IMS, bv The New York World-Telestram Corooration.t YORK. June 17. — Murder is not common among the cats. But Lopez’ heart was all black. The great jaguar seemed glad when Dr. William* T. Hornaday, then director of the zoological park in the Bronx, reached in and stroked his head, and his willingness to romp made him seem eager to be an amiable pet. He deceived them all. they confessed later, and they all agreed with Dr. Hornaday that no cat would put in the whole year merely pretend ing to be good-natured. For reward they ordered a mate for him. She arrived, a female as fine as any jaguar ever brought to town, and as an experiment her cage was in stalled beside Lopez’. Their affair seemed romance at first sight. Lopez tried to caress her through the bars, and she recipro cated. Lopez courted her, and she was pleased. Two days of that and Dr. Hornaday thought it would be cruel to keep them apart longer and that Lopez deserved no more of solitary confinement. The two sets of doors that separated them were drawn open. Proudly and confidently, the bride walked toward her bride groom. Outside the bars zoolo gists watched intently. a a a SHE had not been through Lo pez’s door a second before the pretense of a year fell from him. Blood lust that had been hidden beneath sycophancy was bare. Without warning, he sprang and his jaws closed upon her throat. As his rush bore her to the floor, the attendants swarmed in. They spiked him. They beat him. They even tried to brain him. But Lopez did not once let go. He held her in his jaws un til her cervical vertebrae were crushed and she was dead. That, in the criminology of Bronx Park, was first-degree mur der; perfidious Lopez, they de cided. for a whole year had sim ulated amiability, awaiting his time and his victim. Between that and second-de gree murder the line of difference is finely drawn, as it is outside the park, but the crime of lesser degree is recognized definitely. An historic case reveals the distinc tion. * For seven years two fine and full-grown polar bears nad lived together in an amity which seemed only deepened by almost continuous buffoonery; they boxed, bit and tusseled until they drew blood. And when onp died, the other seemed the loneliest crea ture in the park. Carl Hagenbeck heard about it, and offered a splendid female as mate to the survivor, but the park authorities declined; they thought that if the lone one did not kill a stranger at once, he would wear her out in time with his rough play. HAGENBECK (who had iVI handled about forty polar bears to my one) replied with the assurance that in his opinion all would be well,” Dr. Hornaday re ported in his "The Minds and Manners of Wild Animals.” "As convincing proof of the sincerity of his views, he offered to lose half the purchase price of the female bear in the event that my worst fears were realized. “I asked the opinion of our head keeper of bears and after due re flection he said: “ ‘Why, no. I don’t believe he’d HOOVER CALLS OFF JOURNEY TO COAST BY HENRY F. MISSELWITZ United Press Staff Correspondent WASHINGTON, June 17.—Presi dent Herbert Hoover, formally nom inated for re-election, virtually has decided to cancel his proposed trip to California next month. The President had been desirous of going to Los Angeles to open the Olympic games and it had been suggested that he receive the for mal notice of his renomination at his Palo Alto home, where he was notified in 1928. It is indicated strongly at the White House that Mr. Hoover re luctantly has decided it would not be best to make the transcontinen tal journey at this critical time. It is expected that the President will receive the notification and de liver his address of acceptance either at the White House or at his Rapidan fishing camp, and will di rect his re-election campaign from those two places. A definite decision on these plans awaits further conferences with his permitted to curtail his expend itures as too expensive. Proponents of the tax bill dur ing its discussion in congress con tended that the tax was the most fair of any proposed, since it was levied only on those using the taxable articles as a “take it or leave it’’ proposition—no take, no tax. Although this contention may remain true in principle, there are a number of items where the ‘•take" is almost impossible to avoid, and, likewise, the tax. For instance: Thousands of families own au ' tomobiles and drive an average of 1,000 miles a months necessi tating a complete change of oil at least once a month. Motor oil is taxed at 4 cents a gallon. One refill is six quarts and 6 cents tax. a a a Gasoline wui be taxed at 1 cent a gallon, to be paid by the reflr.er, but there is strong probability that the tax will be passed to tlje consumer in the form of increased prices. Con servatively estimating the family consumption for one car at five gallons a week results in a total monthly tax of 20 cents, i Toilet preparations art taxed at INDIANAPOLIS, FRIDAY, JUNE, 17. 1932 ‘ vipfirv* oJh fVio oftomnfc rvf lrov-*_ kill her.. He's not a bad bear, at all. I thinx we could work it so that there would be no great trou ble.” They bought the bear. They put her cage inside the great, polar bear’s den. At once she and the bereft one fraternized. They licked each other's noses and ate meals by side. At night they slept close together, lit,hough bars separated them. They con vinced every one after three weeks of this that calm domesticity lor them had been predestined. Nevertheless, before they were allowed together the keepers pre advisors, including Everett San ders, who was selected at Chicago as the new chairman of the Repub lican national committee, and as such will be Mr. Hoover’s cam paign manager. Sanders, of Terre Haute, formerly was secretary to President Coolidge. The President’s Rapidan camp may be expected to be the scene of frequent and prolonged political conferences during the summer. Added telephone, telegraph and radio broadcasting facilities are be ing installed there. The President may make several of his campaign speeches from the camp. Aside from the fact the camp of fers a plac# of relaxation during what perforce must be a trying summer for the President, it has the advantage of semi-privacy. It would be possible to hold po litical conferences there at which persons of high importance could come and go with slight chance of being seen. 10 per cent. Two dollars a month is a conservative estimate. The tax will be 20 cents. The twice-a day habit of teeth brushing has been observed thoughtfully by placing dentifrices outside of the class of toilet preparations, with only a 5 per cent tax. Two tubes a month at 25 cents each will be taxed a total of 2Vi cents. ' Unless the family chooses to sit in the dark, or do without the HA-HA/J POn'T electrical refrigerator, it will be difficult not to ‘ take’’ the tax on electrical current, which is 3 per cent. A monthly bill of $5 adds 15 cents to the tax tasaL Zoo bridal resulted in tragedy when jaguar, at right, slew his prospective mate in rage over intrusion on privacy. Mongoose ..and cobra squaring off for battle fatal to snake. At left, polar bear, ever quick to quarrel, even with own species. pared for trouble. They oiled the sieeping den door so that if the female should dash for safety someone could instantly slide the barrier and shut her in. They armed themselves with pike-poles, long iron bars, lariets and long planks a foot wide. "Open her door, a foot only, and let her put her head out. Keep him away.” Dr. Hornaday admitted he was apprehensive as he gave the order. But the female bear was trusting. She pushed her head through, and as the male stood back awaiting her she struggled to hurry in. GIRL BANDIT IS GIVEN 4 YEARS Guilty Plea Is Entered by Lelota Belmore. By Times Special DANVILLE, Ind., June 17.—Next four years of the life of Miss Lelota Belmore, 17, of 242 South Gray street, Indianapolis, will be spent in the Indiana Girls’ school at Cler mont, as a result of her plea of guilty in Hendricks circuit court here Thursday to a charge of bank banditry. She was committed to the school by Judge A. J. Stevenson. The girl confessed that she ac companied Earl Northern to Amo on April 27, when he robbed the Citizens State bank of $1,400. She received SSO of the loot. Northern is serving a twenty-five-year term in the state reformatory. William Behrens and his wife, Margaret, also charged wj.th bank robbery, are awaiting trial here. If the writing of checks is con fined to monthly bills only, the average man will write at least fifteen in that period, and each will be taxed 2 cents, another item of 30 cents. O U tt T TNLESS he presents payment of the bills in person, the checks will have to be mailed. Under the new law-, first-class postage has been increased to 3 cents. Estimating that five other letters will be written during the month, the twenty letters will be taxed 20 cents. The next four taxable items might not apply to all famines, and, if not, the net result will be made up under some other pro vision. Amusement for one week for tw-o persons, at a 50-cent ad mission charge, totals $4, subject to 10 per cent tax. another 40 cents. The expenditure of 25 cents a week for candy will add 2 cents to the monthly tax bilL One long distance telephone call to tell grandma that you and the kids will be out to dinner Sun day will boost the tax total 10 cents, since all calls under 50 cents bear a flat charge of that amount. . “I would not for SSOO see such a thing again.” That is Dr. Hornaday's feeling about what then happened. BUB T7OR the mighty male was a white streak through the air. He lunged and the smaller female, dumfblinded for a moment, • was beyond retaliation. He pressed the advantage. He snapped and tore and chewed, and thereafter for twenty min utes. despite the defense of his victim and the attempts of keep ers to divert his rage, he did not relent in the onslaught. Six frenzied. men tried to stop him. When in the first terrific at tack, the female fell near the cage bars, they were able to beat him , upon the head, drive steel spikes into him. ram him with planks. But he thwarted them; he seized her. dragged her inward and down to the ice that covered the swimming pool, beyond their rea ch. Ice and snow that polished the floor of the den presented a haz ard that stopped them from fol lowing; their last chance was a lasso. Keeper Mulvehill, risking his life, stepped inside, flung a noose HOOSIERS RETURN, SORE AND WEARY BY BEN STERN Indiana’s delegates to the Re publican national convention re turned to their homes today, tired and disappointed. For a few hours Thursday, there I w'as a feeling among the Hoosier delegates that Governor Harry G. j Leslie might get the call for the j vice-presidential nomination. Administration leaders, the night before, while the fight against the Hoover dry plank was under way, indicated that they were willing to talk business if Indiana stood by the administration. The next day leaders of the Il linois delegation, in loud praise of Indiana’s repeal vote, declared that the vote of their state and that of four others would follow Indiana's on the vice-presidency. It then was decided to cast the state’s thirty-one votes for Charles Curtis on the first ballot and, if he i couldn't make the grade, give the j total to Leslie on the second ballot.! Illinois, being called just before Calls costing over $2 will be taxed 20 cents. A birthday greet ing by telegram at a transmission charge of 50 cents will be taxed 5 per cent, a comparatively light impost of 2Vz cents. The sum of the foregoing taxes is $1.68 monthly, a total of $20.16 I HAVE WALKED ANO I CAN 0 0*7 \ a year, which represents an obli gation that, will be difficult to avoid paying. a a a GOING up a notch from the average c ln ss, the taxable items increase. The minimum tax able net income been reduced Second Section Entered as Second-Clasa Matter at Poatcfflce. Indiarv>r*oH and snared him. Another lanat trussed him. But it was too late. Just before they dragged him off. his teeth slashed through the jugular vein of the one who was to have been his mate and in two minutes she was dead. “Remember?” Peter Romanoff, keeper of the bears, echoed today, “i’ll never forget the crunching sound his jaws made That was the only time I ever heard Dr. Hornaday swear.” 808 YET that was not first degree murder, the zoologists con tended. The giant white bear had not plotted it, nor even contem plated it. His first impulse, they concluded, had been merely to Play. “Then the joy of combat seized him,” Dr. Hornaday reported, “and after that his only purpose was to kill.” Not even joy of combat enters into manslaughter at the park, although it is no less sanguinary than the heinous degrees of homi cide. One of Dr. Raymond L. Ditmars’ extraordinary motion lectures pro vides an unsurpassed example. It lays down the canon of self preservation as observed by those natural enemies, the venomous cobra and the violent mongoose. He built a 'set to represent an opening in the jungle, got the ser pent to feel at. home in the glass encased glade; and then turned the mongoose free to emerge through a hollow log/ „ Though the mongoose is some thing like a ferret (it is barred from the county because of the pcssbility of its breeding and menacing poultry) and seems far less sinister than the deadly rep tile, it turned the tables on Its adversary. The cobra reared, spread its hood, was ready to strike its death blow. But in the instant as it poised the mongoose got it; the mongoose sprang, and grabbed it and bit the life out of it; its hypo dermic fangs might as well have been loaded with water instead of with one of the deadliest of poisons. B B B MURDER penalties vary in Bronx Park, and they in clude death. Peter Romanoff knows more about that than any one else in town, for he has been in at the death of more big game than any other crack shot known here; he is as extraordinary a killer as ever came to New York. Probably h& holds the record for bagging the widest range of species—lions, pumas, tigers, bear, buffalo, antelopes, zebras, wolves, foxes and deer. “About everything, I suppose.” he said today, “except an antelope and an elephant.” Where did he get them? That question he answers glibly. "Most of them right behind the ear. . . A few right here, through the heart.” For, besides being keeper of the bears in Bronx Park, he is the park’s ace of riflemen, and he deals fairly both with the luck less ones doomed finally by age or infirmity and with the condemned animal murderers. Indiana, would start the Leslie boom and, because of the wide spread dissatisfaction with Curtis, other states were sure to join. Fear of administratin retaliation kept many of the delegations regu lar. Peculiarly enough, Indiana, most regular of regular states in the past, was the most important of the liberal group in this convention and the attending publicity has tended to raise it in the estimation of the forward looking delegations. taxi drivers talked about Indiana's courage and liberalism. Life Saving Tests to Begin Swimmers over 17 are eligible to enter the four-weeks’ course in sen ior Red Cross life saving which will begin at the Board Ripple pool to night. The course, which will be supervised by Red Cross examiners, will be free. Red Cross life sav ing insignias will be awarded those who pass the tests. from $3,500 to $2,500 a year for married persons. Single persons who paid no tax on a $1,500 in come will find that the limit now is SI,OOO, and that SSOO of their income is subject to taxation. Un der the former scale, the # first $4,000 of income was taxed at a rate of 1% per cent; it now is 4 per cent. In the “take or not take” clas sification are found items such as brewers’ wort, taxed 15 cents a gallon; malt syrup, 3 cents a pound, and grape concentrates, 20 cents a gallon. Here the strong willed man who can say “No” at the proper time finds his reward. The tax on automobile tires and tubes will increase the cost of this equipment to motorists approxi mately 15 per cent, local tire dealers report. Radios and phono graphshave a 5 per cent levy. Motor car parts and accessories are scheduled for increases in price amounting to a 2 per cent tax. Passenger cars will be levied at 3 per cent and commercial cars at 2 per cent. The sportsman will find that his sporting goods and cameras will be subjected to a 5 per cent j&x., and firearms and shells 10 per jsent* AIR OF GLOOM HANGS OVER G. 0. P. HOSTS . i , Anxiety Manifest as Throng Departs From Chicago Convention. PROHIBITION BIG WORRY Choice of Sanders Is Shock to Delegates; Sore Spots Over Curtis. BY RAYMOND CLAPPER United Press Staff Correspondent (Convriaht. 1933. bv United Press* CHICAGO. June 17.—The. Repub lican party set out today on its cam paign fight to hold the White House for another four years. Beneath the party banner of President Hoover and Vice-Presi dent Curtis, and with a prohibition plank taking the party out of the bone dry class, the workers turned homeward today from the national convention. There was some anxiety among the hosts as they marched forth into the battle of 1932. Everett Sanders. Indiana poli tician, one time congressman and later secretary to President Calvin Coolidge, took on today direction of the campaign under his appoint ment as chairman of the Republic an national committee. He was se lected in a national committee ses sion at which full notice was given that funds are low and rations low for soldiers in the coming cam paign. Muttering* Over Curtis Delegates had been prepared J months ago for the inevitable re : nomination of President Hoover. But many openly were dissatis ! fled with the retention of Vice- President Curtis on the ticket this j year. There was some disappointment i also over the selection of Sanders i as chairman of the Republican na ! tional committee. Certain leaders had hoped management of the Hoo ver campaign would be in the hands of a nationally knowm business man, : w'ho would be helpful not only in | throwing high-powered executive : efficiency into the campaign organ | ization. but who would have many j contacts with prospective campaign | contributors. Money is coming hard this year, J. R. Nutt, treasurer, admitted. Republican leaders’ misgivings permeated the delegates and cast a cloud of depression over the en tire convention. Only once was this mood thrown off. That was for a 1 few moments during the staged demonstration when President Hoo ver was proposed for renomina tion in the final session. No* One Is Satisfied Delegates, recognizing from the beginning that the renomination of President Hoover was certain, sought vent for their dissatisfaction in other directions. They found it partly in the prohibition fieht, which resulted in adoption of the administration modification plan, j which apparently satisfied neither the real wets nor the real drys. Mrs. Henry W. Peabody of Mas sachusetts, chairman of the Wom en’s National Committee for Law Enforcement, said that, "regardless of the kind words spoken for pro hibition in the initial paragraphs of the plank, its reference to submis sion brands it as a repeal measure and dry women oppose it and will accept no compromise.” Wets described it as a "straddle.** Even some of the President’s inti mate advisors appeared disturbed! over some features of the plank, particularly that which would give congress the right to prescribe method of sale and distribution of liquor in any state which abandon* prohibition. They foresaw possibilities of con stant conflict between congress and local governments in such attemn* to prescribe details from Washing ton. Sanders’ Election I# Surprise Many delegates also voiced di*i satisfaction over the administra*. tion s attempt to retain Vice- President Curtis as the President's running mate. The final switch of Pennsylvania’s seventy-five votes after the roll call was completed gave Curtis the necessary majority. General belief existed that Charles G. Dawes would have been nomi nated had he not announced he would decline. This anti-Curti* movement developed after the con vention met, and in face of the fact that President Hoover’s spokesmen here had made known they wished Curtis renominated. The election of Everett Sanders as national chairman to succeed Senator Fess surprised the delegates Sanders was sergeant-at-arms of the convention. A faithful lieu tenant overnight was made the gen eral of the Republican forces at the opening of what all acknowledge to b®i*he most difficult campaign since Actually, the real directing force of the campaign will be Postmaster- General Walter F. Brown of Ohio. TWO GIRLS INJURED AS AUTO, TRUCK COLLIDE Flee Scene of Accident; Driver Ar rested for Overloading Car. Two girls were injured slightly early today when a car driven by Lee Sanders, 30, of 1242 North Ala bama street, collided with a cattle truck driven by Harvey Morris, Paris, 111. at Kentucky avenue and Harding street. Police were unable to obtain the names of the injured girls. They left the accident scene. Sanders was arrested on a charge of speeding, failure to have a cer tificate of title for the automobile and for permitting four persons to ride in the front seat of his car. Russell Wilkins. 1102 2 North Alabama street, was riding with Sanders and the two girls, police said. Sanders' car was wracked, w