Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 75, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 August 1933 — Page 14

PAGE 14

— Let’s Go Fishing— ANGLER VOICES CHALLENGE TO CITY CASTERS Fillmore Man Is Ready to Meet All Comers in Contest. BV LfcFTY LEE Tim** I.shim Fditor Parker and Sargc James of Catarac? were perfect hosts to Walter Jon's. Lmil D? Luse and the writer Surdav, providing everything that go* to make the trip a real pleasuie even to the fishing hole The fin ng started from the lo#rr falls a’ Cataract, but th? bass refused to p. up, and the net result was four keepers, two making the acquaintan of a Tom Thumb, one arriving on a vamp spook, and another on a pal o' mine Jonf was the ehamp with 'wo. a lie Lose and Lefty accounted for on' each. F i Sanford of near Fillmore, was in ’own Saturday and issued a cha ienge to some of the boys for a ca :ng match. Sanford just has leatned this type of fishing, and has beer me ;-o enthused that he practic- on a small cre-k that runs across his farm 11 practice seems to have taken up he time that, he formerly used to shoot 'quirrels. At least, he said his woods was full of them, and extended a cordial invitation for us to < ome and thin them out. 'I he answer to the question of. ' say. Lefty, how come all your fishing yarns tell of limit catches?" is tha‘ an angler will not mention the trips he returns from shut out, and can not be quieted when he does take the limit. Rallie Hogan and his fishing buddie are spending the week at Millers camp on Flat Rock Hogan alw.v.s hopes that one of the big cats tha’ live in this stream will decide on his bait for his evening meal. A sign along the bank of Walnut crc'k in Putnam county r n ads: "This wafr unfit to drink, swim or fish in The reason for this condition is the overflow of CJreenrastle's sewer and cesspool that never has been cleaned. Just another beautiful Indiana stream being turned into a sew er. Charlie Trask, a former tennis star, who for years was the Tilden of Indiana, has developed into an anger and is showing the same skill at this great outdoor sport. Trask dropped into the Em-Roe store and had all the boys interested with his stories of some wonderful fishing to he had in West Virginia. The streams are well stocked with brown, brook and rainbow trout, he said, the larger streams producing small-mouth bass wei; hing as much as six pounds, while real musky are to be had in the Elk river The record ratch in this river weighed eighty-five pounds. Trask took one that lipped the scales at forty-two pounds. His favorite Indiana stream is Blue river, below Marietta. Ralph Fish told Emil De Luse. before he started on a fishing trip, that he would send down a large lake trout to be mounted, if he succeeded in taking one. The other day the expressman arrived with a paekage for De Luse that contained a fifteen-pound lakp trout, and express charges of $4.92. Are you smiling? Louis Hammersehlag. who directs the Lyric orehestra when he is not fishing, took a trip to Lena lake with his wife and suffered a 15 to 0 dcfea' Mrs. Hammersehlag catching this number of large blue gill, while he ■ n'lii his time trying to make the acquaintance of Mr Bass. H irry Necs loves to fish along Cir ro creek. On his last trip to his favorite spot. Nees returned with two dandy small mouth bass. Wally Pray is taking time out from his bridge to hunt the big ones that infest the waters at Three Lakes. Wis. His latest report tells of catching a ten-pound musky, and a nine-pound pike. Doc Gates likes Canada for his fishing, and this is why: In one day his party took 46 large bass, and returned more than one hundred smaller ones Several of the boys tried to confuse hint on his story, but Dor stuck by his guns, and when the .moke cleared it still was 46 btg ones. Glf'n Cruzan and his family vacation'd at Lake James, and they cnjoVrd fish just out of the lake to their hearts' content. Pollution will be the topic to reeeiv’ attention of officers of the Uni ed Sportsmen. Inc., when they mer- at the Hotel Washington at 6 p m. Tuesday Thus organization is come a great work, and all spoitsmen should enroll. Yearly dues are only 50 cents, and the full amount us used to fight pollution, the officers devoting their time without salary. IC-A-S-H for OLD GOLD GOLD TEETH WOLF SUSSMAN, Inc. t:tj W IV.ohlnfcton SI. ECONOMICAL CRUISES A day... a wock... or longer To the Chicago World'* Fair ...to Duluth... Buffalo (Niagara Fad*) 7 CHICAGO BUFFALO HII and Mmli *d Return c*w*ooeiotyiofu _ fcom <*W porW. ( Rwlroarf urvito Tldit Ho.or.du 4 CHICAGO - DULUTH via Mackinac Island Day HkMh mm* $ Alfc * D Cruise 9 Pt ■ | Ml G rat Labes Transit Corporation F 5 Oft-rr.S S Jur,ati.S S Tioot* I'C 'iufrtly bfl.tfn Buffalo, OrvtUsd. ) ■V, M<-*,nr l*U-d, Su!t Si. Mint, H mfhtnn. Duluth. Cbicafo, Milwaukr*. A oaaehila CirriW Bmmn All Pom For full Information, apply any Tourist or Railroad A"ent.

Have a Hobby — Japan Stamp Canceled in Mountain Postoffice

Tk.l rt-ft Tl*J M tk* Pul OIL. cn th* Susw* cf Movr" Fuji. ( FUJIYAMA, ) JAPAN'S PEER I FS> MOUNTAIN ft kh JS2 £H - m 4317 Central Avenue , • INDIAXAPCLIS, Ind. cvt. of ah nri c a .

Pictorially Canceled Stamp* From Japan.

BY MRS. C . O. ROBINSON , Timr Hobby Editor A MIDST the pine clad lulls of Japan, a few miles from the great city of Yokohama, lives an American, Karl Lewis, who has been in Japan more than thirty years. He has sent me some interesting ship covers, using a variety of stamps canceled pictorially in red by the Japanese Trans-Pacific mail boats that sail from Yokohama to the Pacific coast. Recently the beautiful cover, illustrated, came to me with the following notation from Mr. Lewis.” The Japanese government opened on July 10, a postoffice on the summit of Mount Fuji (known lo us as Fujiyama i for the convenience of travelers who undertake the arduous walk up the mountain side. About 20,000 people reach the summit yearly and, as climbing the mountain is becoming a popular pastime, the number who make the ascent this year may be considerably more.” The climb Is not difficult, it simply is a weary, tedious walk complicated from the limit of vegetation to within a few yards of the summit by huge heaps of cinders. "Although Fuji has been quiescent for more than 200 years, the cinders loom quite as fresh as if they had been thrown out of the furnace the day before. Perhaps you never before have received a cover mailed so near to heaven. The stamps are canceled with a hand stamp showing Lake Kawaguchi, a picturesque lake near the foothills of Mount Fuji. The postoffice will be open until Aug. 31, when the mountain will be closed officially to climbers." I imagine that the Japanese ask no charge for this cover except the ! cost of envelope and stamps. I am sure that if you send a dime to j Karl Lewis, Box 69. Yokohama. Japan, and remember the foreign postage on your letter Is 5 cents, that he still will have time to purchase one of these covers for you. If not. he will send you a ship cover which is equally pretty. In addition to the ship covers there : are more than 100 towns and vil- j lages in Japan the island of Saghalien. the island of Formosa, and Korea, which have pictorial cancellations, \picturing some ancient temple or noted scene. This artistic conceit for stamp eancella- ; tion is in keeping with the land which produces lovely prints and grows beautiful cherry blossoms. One of President Roosevelt's last official acts before leaving Washington for his Hyde Park vacation

BUILDING & LOAN WILL BUY AND SELL: Railroadmen's. Fletcher Avenue, Celtic, Indiana Savings, Union National and Atkins, Terre Haute and Shelby ville. Schloss Bros. Investment To. I Inrnln ISIS 1.17 r. W nh. SI.

wi an nu eun

We, the undersigned, hereby notify the public that the Meat Packers and Sausage Manufacturers Code, under the N R A, has now been accepted by the Federal Administration and becomes effective immediately, and we pledge our wholesale support to the President in his effort to decrease unemployment and bring back the purchasing Power and Prosperity to our Country. I We sign alphabetically:

Armour & Cos. Brown Bros. F. Hilgemeier & Bro., In;. Indiana Provision Cos. Kingan & Cos., Inc. Meier Packing Cos. Mortimer Schussler Swift & Cos.

WE BUY Waste papeß CALL LINCOLN 3588 American Paper Slock Cos. 840 W. Market St.

was to approve a design for a special postage stamp to assist in arousing the support of the nation in the national recovery act drive. The new postage stamp, which is to be known as the NR A emergency postage stamp, will have as its central subject the figures of a farmer, a business man. an industrial worker. and a woman employe, typifying American industry as they walk hand in hand in common determination. In distinctive lettering to the left of the central group will appear the letters NR A. The stamp will be of regulation size, and the color will be the regular 3-cent purple. The first day of sale Aug. 15 will be in Washington, D. C., and in other postoffices immediately afterward. The American Philatelic Society, which will be meeting in Chicago Aug. 21 to 26. officially will sponsor cacheted first-day covers of the new 1-cent and 3-cent imperforate Century of FVogress stamps with which the United States government has honored this national philatelic society. The cachet will employ the P. S. seal and the old Chicago Penny Post, a local stamp used in 1860. Ten cents for each cover plus the amount to cover postage desired may be sent to the Beverly Hills Philatelic Society, 10410 South Maplewood avenue. Chicago. Orders must be in by Aug. 19. These special stamps will be printed on the presses in the government exhibit at the fair and will be issued in sheets of twenty-five, imperforate and ungummed. They will be sold in sheets only and first will be placed on sale Aug. 25 at the Medinah Michigan Avenue Club, where the society will be in session. After Aug. 28 they will be on sale at the Philatelic agency at Washington. D. C., and at the fair postal station. Immediately following the A. P. S. meeting in Chicago the Indiana Stamp Club will be hosts to the National Precancel Society for the eleventh annual convention to be held in conjunction with the TriState Stamp meeting at the Lockerbie. A cachet in commemoration of the one hundredth anniversary of the founding of the New' York Sun will be applied on Sept. 2 to all standard 6 i size envelopes properly stamped and addressed and sent to F. R. Bruns, cachet director, the Sun, 280 Broadway, New York City. A reproduction of the first copy of the Sun will be inserted in all covers sent unsealed and unstuffed.

Watch Repairing High-Grade Work Moderate Prices ROY F. CHILES 530 Lemcke Bldg.

CONN Bund unit Qrrhratra INSTRUMENTS PEARSON Piano Cos. 128 N. Penn.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

‘BAD WORDS' TO COPS MUDDLE UP HONEYMOON Celebrating Bridegroom Dares Officers to Arrest Him: Accommodated. It was in the wee hours of Sunday morning. A young couple staggered across Michigan street at Highland avenue Sergeant Orville Hudson and Patrolman Fred D. Staggs and George Lowe compared times. Yes. it was 3:40. The blue-coated minions of the law approached the couple, and inquired their destination. "We re frem New York and we re on our honeymoon," declared the gentleman. “What are you doing out this time of night?" asked Staggs. "Lock Me Up If You Can" "It's none of your .... business.” said the gentleman, suddenly bej coming belligerent. "Why. is that the w’ay you talk Ito the New York police?" asked Hudson, shocked. "No. but lock me up if you can," challenged the gentleman. The police did. Today in municipal court three, j before Judge Dewey Myers, the principals in the moonlight dispute lined up. The policemen told their story. It i checked in every detail. No Damage Is Done The attorney for the defense rose. The couple, he explained, were on their honeymoon. They had been to a dance. They had celebrated "a little." There w’as no automobile involved. They were walking home. No damage was done. Everybody was all right today. All was well. Judge Myers gazed at Mr. and Mrs. Horace Steirwalt, 24 and 22, respectively, of 2154 Ashland avenue. "Judgment withheld," he said finally. The honeymoon was resumed.

- : : : • Xv.v:-.*■:•:v.*: iplll ‘ Wk -; jgfeal' —tirttiTiii rnKm ■ W j j m W W Ido not treat my choice of a ciga- so, when I say ’’Luckies Please’* rette lightly... for, as with other —I am paying a tribute to that V § j V little niceties of life, my cigarette immaculate feeling I have when v. j is a matter of intimate concern smoking a Lucky. And that is J with me. After all, Ido place my my own individual reason for J cigarette between my lips! And saying "Luckies Please!” j

PHOTO RECALLS ‘OLD-TIME’ MOVIES

f HI § m e| * iS' ; JBHSSTa a tt lfyr .

Memories of the “good old days" when drama lovers could get their fill of blood and thunder for a 5cent piece, were recalled with the finding by William Simpson Jr., of a picture of the old Scenic theater. East and Washington streets, taken in 1908. The group included in the photograph were, left to right: Izzy

LEAVES TO VIEW BODY City Man to Attempt Identification of Lad Killed in West. Believing a youth who was killed in an accident in Newton. Kan., last week may be his stepson, Alvie Huddleson. 1601 Wilcox street, today wa senroute to the Kansas town to attempt identification. The dead youth is believed to be Rex Sparks. 18. who. one a crosscountry hike, was said to have been scheduled to pass through Newton. He lived with Huddleson at the Wilcox street address. M’KINNEY IS SPEAKER Home Loan Director to Address Savings and Loan League. E. Kirk McKinney, state director of the Home Owners’ Loan Corporation, will address members of the Indiana Savings and Loan League at the Lincoln at 10:30 Thursday. Advisability of acceptance of home owners’ loan bonds by members of the association will be considered.

Greenberg. Quinn Hetherington, saloon keeper; Gilbert Speller, Paul Mattox, operator; ,1 Russell Robinson, pianist; his mother, the theater cashier; William Simpson, the theater owner, and Earl Blacker. singer. Robinson later gained fame as the author of the popular song hit of 1921. ‘ Margie."

SCHOLARSHIPS GRANTED Total of $78,400 Is Awarded to 98 by De Pauw Foundation. Scholarships valued at S7B 400 were granted today by th Edward Rector Scholarship foundation at De Pauw university. Seventeen states and one foreign country are represented in the list. Each of the ninety-eight successful candidates will receive a scholarship, valued at SBOO. paying all tuition and fees for four years. The list of winners includes the following from Indianapolis; James Albert Ali. John Jervis Flick and Robert Lee Williams, Arsenal Technical. and Harry Page Bucher. Shortridge. The one fore'gn student will be Bertrand Krieie of the American school, in Sendai, Japan.

Progress the Soft Water Laundry

ASSISTANT TO POSTMASTER IS RETIRED TODAY Leaves Local Office After 42 Years’ Service: No Hint on Successor. After forty-two years of active duty in the Indianapolis postoffice Allison Mundelle. assistant postmaster. is going on the retired list today. For the last thirty-five years Mundelle has not lost an hour because of illness. He is retiring because he is beyond the age limit. Mundelle started in the govern-

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-AUG. 7, 1933

ment service Dec 31. 1890. as a substitute clerk. Before being appointed to his present position, three years ago. he served as superintendent, of mails for eight years. Although Monday was his last day in service. Mundelle will be given two weeks' vacation with pay. He lives at 3041 Park avenue Successor to Mundelle has not been appointed by President Roosevelt. It is believed that Frank Rinkard of Indianapolis will be appointed. Nineteen hundred years ago the Romans believed that there were people in the depth of Africa who had no noses, and others without tongues. LINOLEUM SHADE CLEANING WINDOW SHADES Patterson Shade Cos. 132 N. Delaware St. Rl. !!>