Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 47, Indianapolis, Marion County, 5 July 1933 — Page 12
PAGE 12
—Let’s Go Fishing—
GAME AND FISH FIND HAVEN ON WALTON FARM State Convention Will Be Held at Logansport Preserve. BY LEFTY LEE Time* Finhine Editor The Cass county chapter of the Izaak Walton league will be host to the Waltonlans at Its beautiful home one mile north of Logansport, during the annual convention of the league Sept. 4, 5 and 6. In the spring of 1931 this chapter bought a forty-acre farm, and have turned it into a haven for wild life. A spring-fed four-acre pool produced 25,000 fingerling bass in 1932. The chapter now has four pools for spawning and is raising large and small mouth bass, red eye and blue gill. An extensive forestry program also was decided upon and 35,000 trees, Norway Spruce, walnut, Scotch pine, red oak, black locust and tulip poplar, were placed and are in a healthy condition. The house that stood on the farm has been remodeled, and is being used as a clubhouse. An up-to-date bathing beach, archery and rifle range and a gun club with four traps also are part of the establishment. Birdhouses sufficient to care for 500 pairs of birds have been placed at different locations on the farm. Members attending the convention are invited to bring along their guns, fishing tackle and bathing suits, and leave the matter of entertaining to the Cass county boys. More than 100,000 small-mouth bass were hatched in the two ponds at Memorial park, Huntington, this year by the Izaak Walton chapter of that city. This chapter also hopes to plant 25,000 large-sized bass this year. An angler writes to request information concerning the oroper method of carrying helgemite. A better method may be known, but we always have been successful in placing leaves in the bucket w'ith about one inch of water, which gives the bait its own choice. The United Sportsmen of Indiana, In';., is enjoying a steady growth. The lovers of the great outdoors gladly are enrolling with this organization in its efforts to make conditions in Indiana’s fields and streams on a par with any other state in the Union. This organization is pledged to stop stream pollution, promote public shooting grounds, foster reforestation of watersheds and waste lands, prevent unnecessary drainage of marsh lands, determine rights to waterways, encourage appreciation of the out-of-doors and improve hunting and fishing. The membership fee is but 50 cents a year, the full amount being used for the above purpose. Lee Emmelmann is treasurer of the organization, and will enroll you if you mail or send the dues to him at the Em-Roe Sporting Goods Company, Indianapolis. Harry Bason certainly can tickle the keys of a piano, but is an utter failure to date as a fisherman. His two trips this season, one to Lake Manitou and the other to the Oakdale dam, being blank as far as catching fish is concerned. Harry is living in hopes, however. The art of being a real angler runs in the family, as witness the alltime record catch of his nephew, in the Niagara river. The youngster, who is only 16 years old, landed a forty-two-pound northern pike. The catch created a sensation in that part of the country, and yong Bason and his catch made the front page.
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W' 'W
Lona Andre and Gail Patrick, a couple of beauties who made good in the movies, already know all the ropes of Hollywood and now they are learning about those on boats. Here they are, practicing up for the summer yachting season.
BANK RECEIVER SUES TO REGAIN DIVIDENDS Hack Names 97 Stockholders as Defendants. Renewing efforts to increase the liquid assets of the defunct Washington Bank and Trust Company, Oren S. Hack, receiver, today filed suit in circuit to recover $77,494 in dividends paid to ninety-seven stockholders. Civil actions, authorized by Circuit Judge Earl R. Cox, to increase the receivership assets, include $2,500,000 against the Washington directors and $625,000 against bonding companies. The dividend suit filed today includes claims for the return of amounts ranging from S3O from several stockholders, to $11,887 from Mark V. Rinehart, director and former vice-president of the bank. There were no net profits earned by the bank from 1918 to September, 1930, it has been revealed, but directors declared dividends out of capital stock. On Jan. 4, 1928, the Washington bank directors declared a 100 per cent stock dividend on 1,000 shares of stock of SIOO par value, thus increasing the capitalization to $200,000. To get reliable employes, use The Times’ new high speed Help Wanted service—Riley 5551.
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STOCK PROBERS TO DELVE INTO RAILROAD DEAL Cleveland Magnate to Face Grilling by Pecora on Thursday. BY NED BROOKS Times Special Writer WASHINGTON, July s.—Sale by Frank E. Taplin, Cleveland railway ; magnate, of a controlling interest in | the Pittsburgh & West Virginia railroad at a price $6,000,000 above the market value of the stock, will be scrutinized by the senate committee when it resumes its inquiry Thursday of Kuhn, Loeb & Cos. Testimony earlier in the hearings disclosed that the Pennroad Corporation, holding company in which the public had invested more than $130,000,000, paid Taplin and his associates $37,898,100 for 222,930 shares of the railroad’s stock just a few weeks before the stock market crash of October, 1929. The price was $l7O a share, or S3O above the market quotation. Ferdinand Pecora, committee counsel, made two unsuccessful attempts to get Taplin before the committee. He finally succeeded in having the subpena served, and also summoned A. J. County, Pennroad’s financial vice-president and director, who vas active in the negotiations. Pecora is anxious to learn who was associated with Taplin in the transaction; what their profits were; why the “bounty” was paid on the stock, and w’hy 73 per cent was purchased when 51 per cent would have given Pennroad the control it sought. Testimony also has disclosed that the Pennroad Corporation made a $1,950,000 loan to Taplin with which to purchase railroad stocks about five months before the P. & W. Va. | deal was closed. Pecora also expects the inquiry to Ifhrow further light on the conquest waged for control of important eastern tributary lines by the two rival holding companies—Allegheny Corporation, organized by J. P. Morgan and the Van Sweringens, and Pennroad Corporation, founded by the Pennsylvania railroad with Kuhn, Loeb & Cos. as underwriters. The hearings will adjourn Thursday until October. Times Want Ads start in the FIRST EDITION each day and continue through all other editions. Your ad accepted as late at 10 p. m.
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
The City in Brief
THURSDAY EVENTS Advertising Club, luncheon, Columbia Club. Engineering Society, luncheon, Board ot Trade. Sigma Cbi Alumni Club, luncheon, Board of Trade. American Business Club, luncheon, Columbia Club. Acacia, luncheon, Harrison. Illini Club, luncheon, Columbia Club. Sigma Nu, luncheon. Washington. Yeggs obtained no loot after battering a safe in the office of the Indianapolis Basket Company, Henry and Willard streets. Monday, but failed to break the combination, police learned today when they were called to the plant by an employe who found a rear door open early today. While protecting Joseph Hensel, 3, of 863 North Oakland avenue, from a stray dog which had bitten him through the lip, Earl Hightower of 3805 East Eleventh street, was bitten on the right hand. High- ] tower killed the dog with a piece of gas pipe. He and the boy were treated at city hospital. A large splinter from a tom basket severed an artery in the leg of Mrs. Tiny Montgomery, 40, Negro, of 437 Tippecanoe street, while she was working in the home of Mrs. Rose Jones, 28 North Bradley avenue, Tuesday. She w r as taken to city hospital. While playing at Brookside park ten days ago, Richard Bruchoeser, 7, of 1358 Ewing street, suffered a small scratch on his right hand which became infected and Tuesday he was taken to city hospital for treatment. Harry H. Crooks, graduate of the Indianapolis Bible Institute, and a member of the staff of the Wheeler Rescue Mission, will address the Bible Investigation Club of the Y. M. C. A. in a series of Wednesday evening talks beginning tonight, at 6:45, in the Central Association building. KOKOMO PIONEER DEAD By United Press KOKOMO, Ind., July 5. Mrs. Eliza Hogg, 84, Kokomo’s oldest native bom resident, died at her home here Tuesday where she had lived since 1868. Her father w r as the first Howard county clerk.
jsfr iijm- ■ AF ,:|Mp| ;C|: jHjjYu I ~p- BJIHBgPs Vj W' : ' y y B§, ■ 4My reason for liking Luckies is strictly personal jBF ItiSmM if After all since I smoke quite a sonal contact with me, you know. JF / number of cigarettes each day—don’t Just knowing that each puff of *Mf Jj l 4/ yOU it S ust as well that 1 lean Luck y smoke I draw in is pure—ntm* r ° Mai in the right direction? Perhaps you’d it makes the pleasure of fragrant y call my reason for liking "Toasting” toasted tobacco that much greater. assurance of purity it gives me— Certainly, purity never hurt anyone! for Luckies come in rather dose per- And besides—" Luckies Please!” Copyright. 1933. The American Tbbteeo because Its toasted !
G. 0. P. ELDERS MAKE READY TO OUSTSANDERS Attacks by Republicans on Roosevelt Regarded as Major Blunders. BY LEO R. SACK Times Special Writer WASHINGTON. July s.—Recent Republican attacks on President Roosevelt have caused such widespread criticism among some of the “elder statesmen” of the Republican party that a plan to reorganize the national committee is being considered. National Chairman Everett Sanders, former secretary to the late Calvin Coolidge, who was chosen a year ago upon the recommendation of former President Herbert Hoover, is said to be aware of this sentiment. Despite Sanders’ reported reluctance, the committee can be asassembled at the request of sixteen members and these sixteen, it is said, are preparing to act. The attacks on President Roose-
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| velt by Senator David A. Reed of Pennsylvania, Bertrand Snell, house Republican leader Sanders and others are described as “major taci tical errors” by other G. O. P. lead- . ers. They assert that the rise in com-
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modity prices, the unquestioned decrease in unemployment, and the prospects of business rehabilitation through the national recovery law and the public works program greatly have enhanced Mr. Roosevelt's popularity.
.JULY 5, 1933
Fanner Hangs Self In Barn By United Press ROCHESTER. Ind., July 5 -Domestic trouble was blamed today for the suicide of Lewis Goff. 50. farmer near here, who hanged himself in a barn.
