Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 34, Indianapolis, Marion County, 20 June 1933 — Page 4

PAGE 4

ANGLERS FLOCK TO LAKES, BUT FISHFOOL'EM Barbee Area Produces Best Results; Gus Habich Leads Gang. BY LEFTY LEE Timet Staff Writer Indiana took to the lakes and streams over the week-end, trying for the wily bass in its favorite haunts. But, as a general thing, Mr. Bass also was away and no great catches were reported. The Barbee lakes seem to have enjoyed the best results, every report from there stating that the fish were hitting. Schaefer and Freeman lakes were so crowded with anglers that one of the boys remarked upon his return that one had to be an expert to keep from hitting another boat while casting. That veteran sportsman, Gus Habich, fishing on Tippecanoe river, seems to have the edge on the other boys. A card from him stated he had taken nine beauties since the season opened, although the river was about eight inches high.

The fact that the bass were not doing so well does not mean that the fishermen failed to bring back a mess, as the crappie and channel catfish in the lake region w’ere Diting fine. Claude Allen and Jim and Cecil Fiynn took their limit of crappie on Monon creek and, in addition, Jim Flynn took a dandy tw o-pound black bass. The angler who carried soft crawfish with him to the Norway dam was well repaid with a real mess of the best food there is—to our notion —channel catfish. Charley Riddin and Lee Meyer spent their opening trip at Owen park, on Eel river. Riddin took two bass and, in addition, the boys connected for a dandy string of crappie. Headed by Ernie Tapscott, advertising manager of The Times, the entire staff enjoyed the week-end at Wawasee, but the fish seemed to have been warned in advance, and the report was no fish, but a dandy time. Roy Phillips took his Tom Thumb along Raccoon creek and managed to haul three bass of an average weight of two pounds into his creel. Raccoon, and, in fact, all creeks west of the city, are low and rain Is needed in these waters to pep things up.

Claude Reed seems to have studied the habits of the channel catfish and has the reputation of always bringing back a dandy mess when he goes after them. This fish is not protected by any law. But each year more fishermen are convinced they should be. Here’s hoping they will be, as an angler really can enjoy himself catching hem. A four to six-pound member of this species will battle from fifteen to twenty minutes before he Is convinced he is caught. At the William Emsting cottage on Freeman lake, the following anglers and their wives were guests over the week-end: L. E. Schaefer; W. M. Minger, H. Robinette, H. Arnholter. and Cedric Hobbs. When the fishermen did not return in time with the fish for the table the wives drove to a farmhouse and bought chicken. And they were right. Jack Fender still is proud of the five-pound six-ounce small-mouth bass that he caught on April Fool day, 1924, in the Tippecanoe river. The fish measured 21'i inches. It Was mounted and has been on display at a downtown sporting goods store.

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Here Is Indeed Great News for Vacationists Two Delightful Summer Vacation Cruises You'll want the very most you can get out of your two precious weeks this summer. Here it is! Not only the nth degree of all the vacation pleasures you have dreamed of ashore . . . but luxurious yachting over thousands of cool sea miles ... to golden foreign shores a* iust a few cents a mile. ** * J 12Vz DAYS I 12V2 DAYS To Saguenay River, Capes Trinity - . and Eternity; Quebec, St. Pierre To ft e & lamor ous West Indies and and Bermuda. j South American ports. *lO5 * [HO *125 Give yourself one of these supreme vacations. It will cost you less per square minute of pleasure than anything else you could do. For Complete Details Communicate With RICHARD A. KURTZ, Manager Travel Bureau a The Leading Travel Bureau of Indianapolis PINION TRUSTS f ) E. Market St. Riley 5341.

Air Cavalcade Hops Off Here on Annual 800-Mile Jaunt Over State

Fifth Yearly All-Indiana Tour Started From Hoosier Field. With roaring motors and whistling struts, the fifth annual allIndiana air tour got under way at Hoosier airport this morning for an 800-mile jaunt over the state with stops at ten cities Included in the air cavalcade were seven army ships from Ft. Benjamin Harrison and the national guard field. Forty planes were in the tour. First stop on the itinerary was at Seymour, for lunch, with the group spending the night at Louisville. The tour will drop down from the clouds at Sullivan for lunch Wednesday, being entertained overnight at Terre Haute. Smith Is First Up Other cities on the itinerary are Lafayette and South Bend, Kokomo and Ft. Wayne, Portland and Muncie, Richmond Sunday morning and return to Indianapolis municipal airport. First plane to leave the airport today was an army ship flown by Lieutenant Stanton T. Smith, commander of Schoen field, Ft. Benjamin Harrison, carrying Herbert O. Fisher, tour director. They left early to make arrangements for the tour planes to land at Seymour. Thirty minutes later, they were followed at thirty second intervals by the other army ships, and then the commercial planes. The army planes will give demonstrations of formation flying and mock ground attacks at each stop. Another feature of the program at stops will be parachufe jumps by Gene Rock, Ft. Wayne. McElroy Is on Tour Among the passengers on the tour was Clarence McElroy, Medaryville (Ind.) aviator, who just a year ago was lost in the jungles of Guatemala, being forced down by a tropical storm while ferrying a plane to Central America. He crawled through the jungle seventeen days, with both hips broken, before being found by an Indian boy. Pilots of the military planes, besides Smith, were: Lieutenants Poe T. Shumate, E. H. Jose, Robert A. Bolyard and Harold M. Barnes, all of Schoen field; Captain L. I. Aretz and Lieutenant Howard H. Maxwell, Indiana national guard squadron,

Upper (left to right)—“Garbed in Uniforms” of the air tour are: Jess Gaugh, Blake Wiison, Bob Shank, Hoosier airport president, and Harry Boggs, Capitol airport manager. Lower—Mrs. Peggy Wilson, tour secretary; Lieutenant Stanton T. Smith, Schoen field commander and leader of the eight military planes on the tour, and Herbert O. Fisher, tour director.

and Lieutenant Pat Moran, Louisville, Kentucky national guard. Commercial type plane pilots included: Major Charles E. Cox Jr., municipal airport manager; Walker W. Winslow, Indiana Aviation Corporation president; Otto W. Eisenlohr, Richard Arnett, Central Aeronautical Corporation president; Frank E. Ball, Muncie; Clyde Shockley, Muncie, flying a Sikorsky amphibian; Derby D. Fry, South Bend; Clarence F. Cornish, Ft. Wayne; Jack Lenkart, Bradford, Pa.; Reed Kinnert, Richmond; Raymond G. Lloyd, Terre Haute; A. J. Brown, Oak Park, 111.; Joe D. Vail, Madison; L. B. Lower, Richmond; Bob Carey, Anderson; Miss Gertrude Allen, Kokomo; Charles W. Miller, New Albany; Frank Herdrick, W. C. Smith, Mrs. Lenore Harper. Edward F. New, John D. Ryan, Elvan Tarkington, Tarkington Aviation Corporation president; Harry Boggs, Capitol Airport manager, and Bob Shank, Hoosier airport manager. FLORISTS TO PARLEY Indiana Men to Aid in Drawing Up Recovery Act “Code.” Indiana florists will attend a meeting of the floral industry at Rochester, N. Y„ Friday, at which a code to conform with the new industrial recovery act is expected to be drafted.

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ClearYourSkin of fhmpleb Anoint the affected parts with Cntienra Ointment. Wash off in a few minutes with Cntienra Soap and hot water and continue bathing for several minutes. Nothing purer or better for skin troubles.' Writ* for special folder on' the care of the skin Address: “Cutieura,” Dept. 91*?; Maiden. Maas.

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NEIGHBORHOOD THEATERS —— Talbot st 22nd 1 amily Nite MUMMMhMI Lila Lee “OFFICER IS" PMREIEpSi W. Wash. BeL IZjXI I|T7|g| Family Nite Billie Burke “CHRISTOPHER STRONG” ■MDBaHi Cotlere at Noble ■TVjKKVI Family Nite ImhAhH Clyde Beatty ** “THE BIG CAGE”

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

COPS GRILL SLUGGER i Youth Is Identified; Slated by| Police on Vagrancy Count. | Police said today the youth who ran amuck on the south side Sun-; day, attacking three persons before; he was beaten into unconsciousness* by three policemen and one of his ; victims, has been identified as Vernon Jones, 18, of 1214 West Nineteenth street.

LADIES FREE TONITE I Riverside’s New Dance Palace Gentlemen—Admission 10c | Before 8:30

AMUSEMENTS I wriTistfii n^rTTSn *‘Ori'Jmai'joy l Boy’• fun *® b . Rube Demarest more fun to Olive Sibley know? Rodney & Gould *< TSiPIf The Four ■ nlvn stlST™, FOR TRICK” . n Fox Film hit with vniv Ralph Morgan V \v£n\? n £ OT * aU V Blane

MOTION PICTURES COMFORTABLY COOL.. .NOT COLO APOUOS WHERE 810 PICTURES FLAX A NAUTICAL—NUTTYCAL—MUSICAL “MELODY CRUISE" with CHARLIE RUGGLES PHIL HARRIS GRETA NISSEN NEXT FRIDAY WARNER BAXTER Etissa Land!—Miriam Jordan ba ‘I IQYED YOU WEDHESDAY’

LEE TRACY In Meho-Go/dwyn-Moyerj Hlf “THE NUISANCE” WITH MADGE EVANS —EXTRA—LAUREL AND HARDY IN “ME AND MY FAL” _ “I COVER THE WATERFRONT” jU Max Miller’s Story LgiPJW with Claudette Colbert Ben Lyon Ernest Torrence

isas “ANN CARVER’S PROFESSION” FAY WRAY—GENE RAYMOND ADDED ATTRACTION SCHMELING-BAER FIGHT PICTURES

INDIANA BANDS WILL PLAY AT FAIRJULY 13 Hoosier Day to Be Featured at Chicago; McNutts to Attend. BY MRS. MAURICE MURPHY Times Staff Writer CHICAGO, June 20.—A number of Indiana bands and orchestras will be in Chicago July 13 to pari ticipaie in the celebration of Indiana day at a Century of Progress exposition. Joe Gremmelspacher, head of the high schopis’ music organizations of

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Indiana, amd Wallace Richards, who is in charge of the Indiana building at the fair, are working out a plan for the many band stands, amplifiers and for seating arrangements. It is planned that the Indiana ceremonials will begin in the midafternoon and continue into the evening. Governor Paul V. McNutt will speak from 5:30 to 6 p. m. from the rostrum of the federal building. facing the Indiana hall, in the Court of States. Back of the speakers’ stand will be box seats for special guests who also will be invited to attend the evening reception for Governor and Mrs. McNutt. By special arrangements with Harry S. New, United States commissioner to A Century of Progress, the affair will be held in the beautiful reception room of the Federal building. The hours for receiving will be from 9to 11. During this time the

Indiana building will remain open so Hoosiers may visit the exhibit. Members of Tri Kapa sorority of Indiana, of which Mrs. Chalmer C. Schafer of Ft. Wayne is grand president. will be hostesses in the Indiana building the week of July 9 to 16, fifty members of the sorority being hostesses for each day. A feature of the Tri Kappa program. when all 112 chapters in Indiana will be represented, will be an exhibit of Indiana's contribution to humorous literature. IDAHO NEARS 3.2 BEER Solons Pass Bill Legalizing New Brew in Special Session. By United Proa BOISE, Idaho, June 20.—A bill legalizing 3.2 per cent beer passed the house of representatives of the Idaho legislature Monday. The measure now goes to the senate, where approval virtually

-JUNE 20, 1033

would enact it into law as Governor C. Ben Ross asked for beer legislation in his call for the special .'i'ssion.

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