Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 97, Indianapolis, Marion County, 1 September 1933 — Page 26

PAGE 26

—Let's Go Fishing— CHEER IS GIVEN STATE ANGLERS FOR WEEK-END Fishing Should Sr Good for Sunday and Holiday, Reports State. BY LEFTY LEE Timet Fiihint Editor Anglers certainly will be elated over the weekly report of (fame wardens, as better flshintr is promised. With the added holiday Monday. every one should get his fill. Os course, pollution would have to creep in, at some spots, to spoil things, but sportsmen of the state and other conservation agencies are becoming aroused and hope for better conditions in the future is bright The wardens’ reports follow Warden Burnett. Knox and Sullivan Counties—White and Wabash rivers have cleared up some and Ashing over the week-end should be good. Warden llbnnett, Davis and Martin Counties—Both forks of White river are in ideal condition for fishing. Hindustan Falls was the center of attraction during the last week. This falls is on White river, between Shoals and Loogootee, and camping sites are fine. Here is a list of the larger fish actually caught at this spot during the week J. H. Bridmore, ten-pound catfish; Harvey brothers. Loogootee sixty-eight-pound catfish; Smith, plane pilot for Thomas Tageart Jr. of French Lick. 4 : -pound smallmouth bass: George Fox New Albany. 4' -pound and Paul Lindlev, Paoli five-pound bass. Wardens Roth and McClean, White and Carroll Counties—Shafer and Freeman lakes are clear. Tippecanoe river low and clear. Some dandy small-mouth bass were taken from these waters during the last week. Warden Herron. Bartholomew and Johnson Counties—Blue river. Sugar and Young's creeks are in fine shape. In Bartholomew county. Driftwood. Fla* Rock. Sand, and Clifty creeks are in fine shape. Pollution is entering White river at Columbus, which makes fishing practically impossible below this town. Warden Lacey. Greensburg—Blue river. Flat Rock Clifty and Sand creeks are clear and in good shape McCoy and Allens lake also clear. Muskatatuck river is cloudy. Big Four reservoir very low and in poor fishing condition. Warden Grossman. Noble and DeKalb Counties —The fish are biting better than at any time this month. Bass hitting fairly well and bluegill biting fine One twenty-nine-inch pike reported taken from the Elkhart river. Lakes and rivers are getting lower and some of the smaller streams are almost dry. Plenty of rabbit and quail. Squirrel hunters also are doing better, several having from two to five fox squirrels when seen. Warden Mendeth. Warren. Fountain and Montgomery Counties—All streams in this territory low and clear; fishing not so good Warden Weser, Cass and Miami Counties—Wabash and Eel rivers are cloudy. Warden White. Tippecanoe and

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Benton Counties—Streams in these counties are just a little cloudv. not many fishermen out. Warden Bartock. Lake and Porter Counties—Lakes George and Long are clear. Lake Dale Cariia low. with green vegetation over surface Bass, bluegill, red eye and crappie biting fine. Burns, Deal and Salt creeks low and clear. Warden Havel. Newton and Jasper Counties —Rivers low and not very clear. Fishing is poor Squirrel hunting also is very poor, as the woods are too dry. Warden Walker. La Porte—Lakes and streams in this sertion are low and clear and fish are biting better since the weather has cooled off. The pheasant recently liberated are dome fine; plenty rabbit and quail, and it looks like good hunting this fall. Warden Casady.. Shelbv and Hancock Counties—All streams in these counties are low; fishing is poor. Warden Pritchett. Gibson and Pike Counties Patoka. White and Wabash rivers are very low and not very clear. While fishing Raccoon creek with Waiter Jones last week, thousands of bass from fingerling size to ten inches long were seen. If the polluters. seiners and dynamiters are kept out of this creek, it should regain its reputation as one of the best bass streams in the state.

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TEN SAVED IN BOAT FIRE AT WORLD FAIR Passengers Calm as Blaze Forces Them Into Lake. B‘j I nitrri Prefit CHICAGO. Sept. I.—Forced to leap from a burning world's fair speedboat a mile offshore in Lake Michigan, nine passengers and the pilot of the Texas weie rescued fiom the water late Thursday by coast guard and other craft. The speedboat broke into flames while cruising, shortly after leaving the Thirty-ninth street port,. Bud Sheldon, pilot, said there was no hysteria among passengers. Each quietly donned i life preserver and jumped overboard at his command. he said In the water, the passengers clung to one an other until help arrived. The craft burned to the waterline and sank. Cause of the fire was not learned. West Coast to Get Shriners Sii I mted Pres* SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. I.—The Pacific coast will entertain the nation's Shriners at their 1935 convention. delegates returning here from the Atlantic City conclave announced. The specific city has not been named as yet, it is said.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

IGKES NOW HAS POWER DENIED BY CONGRESS Interior Secretary Clothed in Mantle of Oil Industry Dictator. BY MARSHALL McNEIL Timn Special Writer WASHINGTON, Sept. I.—Harold Ickes today has what congress wouldn't give him; is clothed with powers that congress would not confer. He and young '‘Jim” Moffett, who quit a SIOO,OOO job with Standard of New Jersey, will administer the oil code, virtual bosses, with the Presides, of a $13,000,000,000 industry. It indicates that Interior Secretary Ickes is emerging as the strong man of the Roosevelt administration, whose power and influence will not be snubbed by the house and senate in the future, as in the past. In the oil code, approved by NR A and the President, Secretary Ickes has seen enacted every major principle of his old oil “dictatorship” bill which congress refused to pass; and now he is administrator of the code. Working with him will be Moffett and M. L. (Mike) Benedum of Pittsburgh. both of wnom helped him draft that bill, and Donald R. Richberg, NRA general counsel. These three compose the government's members of the oil planning and coordinating committee. Secretary Ickes’ early plans for an oil bill w'ere frustrated in the senate by Senators Tom Connallv, Texas, and William Gibbs McAdoo, California. “Ickes only wants to be an oil dictator,” said some members of congress who opposed his plan last winter. If he did. he now is. In co-operation with the committee and the bureau of mines, which is now in his own department. Secretary Ickes will fix production quotas for the oil states, and recommend tcN the President what steps should be taken in fixing oil prices, complete power over which is granted in the code.-. With Ickes as oil administrator, there seems little doubt but that the President will utilize his power over prices, for since the beginning, ! the secretary has been fighting for price-fixing. He shares none of the fears held by Hugh Johnson, NRA administrator, that oil price-fixing is dangerous.

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SEPT. 1, im