LOCAL REPUBLICAN WOMEN EFFECT SPEEDY ORGANIZATION(Continued from Page 1.)ing their own plans and selecting their own committees. The convention. Mr. Warner said, was the first general convention of Republican women held in the state, and county committee women were urged to select women to work for full registration to prevent a crowding of the booths on October 1G.ElectCounty Chairmen and State Committee .MembersA report on the conferences and work of Republican women to date, was given by Miss Jeannette Eckman, assistant secretary, after which a plan of organization was discussed and adopted. The following chairmen were elected for each hundred: Brandywine hundred. Mrs. .1. Allen Colby; Christiana hundred. Miss Ella Johnson; Mill Creek hundred, Mrs. C. P. Dickey; White Clay Creek hundred. Mrs. Jas. McKelve.v; New Castle hundred. Mrs. Julias Dod'd;Red Lion hundred, Mrs. Thomas Whitely; Pencader hundred, Miss Miriam Alrichs. There was no representation from St. Georges, Blackbird and Appoquinimink hundreds, and it was moved that I Miss Eckman be allowed to re-, ceive names from the hundreds later. Three members for the state committee from New Castle county were elected. They were Miss Ella Johnson, of Newport; Mrs. William Leach, of New Castle, and Miss Ethel Brown, of Middletown.In the evening a meeting of the women of the city was held at the same place.Nat ional Organization MakesRofTObiTU:Sie:ciTech.e'AppealMiss Mary Stewart of New York, a member of the Eastern Division of the Speakers’ Bureau, declared the principles of the party. “By inherent nature women are constructive; they yearn to build; their contribution to our nation has ever tended to upbuild her prosperity and guide her in the ways of peace. The broad con-stiuctive program of the Republican party appeals very stronglyftaRncclt;\'1VVI