Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 119, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 September 1933 — Page 16

PAGE 16

—Let’s Go Fishing— POLLUTION WAR AID SOUGHT GY INDIANA BOARD Sportsmen Urged to Join Organizations to Halt Stream Poisoning. BY LEFTY I.F.E Ilßfi Fisbint F.ditar The regular monthly report of the conservation department tells of some wonderful strides made in correction of the evil of pollution and advises all sportsmen to join with some organization to bring pressure on the cities and manufacturers who have made no attempt to correct this condition. As pointed out the federal government will donate; 30 per cent of the money needed for this work and loan the other to 70 per cent at a 4 per cent interest for thirty years. Thus offer should be . taken advantage of, as it not only will provide work for men who need it. but also will eliminate a condition that never should hjfie existed, j The department has received sev- ! eral complaints regarding the overcharging of individuals for fishing licenses. Three persons have been arrested during the last month for this violation. If you are overcharged the department requests you to please report the matter and action will be taken at once. Arrests for the last month for violations of the fish and game laws numbered sixty-four. Fifty-one convictions were obtained and four cases dismissed. Nine cases are still pending. Those convicted paid in a total of $1,179.03 to cover fines. Here is some good new\s. Ten [ dynamiters were taken during the last month and the fish and game officials are going to do their best j to see that these fish hogs get the legal limit. In addition to their routine duties, the wardens have been busy rescuing stranded fish from streams and old beds that were drying up. Here is the list of fish saved. Warden Claude Burnett seined the Killion old bed and rescued 2.000 blue gill and crappie.! Warden Oral Anderson removed | thousands of blue gill, crappie. bass ; and Pike from the Robinson old bed, ( and placed them in Kilmore creek. 1 Warden Harry White took between approximately 50,000 flngerling bass, blue gill crappie and cat fish from the pond that was drying up at Widewater and placed tl in the Wabash river and Wildcat creek in Whitley county and succeeded in taking more than 800. The operation of predatory fish crews has proven costly and next year the department will co-operate with various clubs, under the supervision of the wardens, in removing these fish. The money paid the clubs for j thus work w'ill help them in their activities and more predatory fish ; will be destroyed at a smaller cost, j The fish plantings have gone along solendidly and plantings at Wawasec. Avaco and Tri-Lakes are near completion. Bass lake plant- ; ings will be completed in about : three weeks, and the Riverside hatchery will be finished about the i last of October. The fish that are being planted now. on the average, are larger than early plantings. This month also ends the liberation of pheasant and the records show that a total of 10.500 from the Jasper-Pulaski game farm and 3,000 from the Brown county game farm will have been released. About 1.000 more will be released before the ac- j tivities for the year end. The de-J partment feels that it owes a vote j of thanks to the men at the game farms for the diligent service they have rendered. It also appre- j ciates the splendid co-operation it j has received from the various organizations in the liberation of these birds. Schedules have been made up to liberate the balance of the birds on hand, and no more requests need be filed as the department will be unable to supply any more until next year. Tire Kendallville Conservation Club is preparing to construct a group of ponds for the breeding and rearing of fish. This was made possible by the generosity of one of their leading conservationists. Peter McCray. The fish raised in these ponds will be used to stock Bixler lake and other nearby waters. Orval Altum had some rare sport at Lake Wawasee recently as he landed, among other fish, a sevenpound pike and a fourteen-inch porch. He also had two other pike strike at him but. in each case, they broke the line. The recent rains should freshen up all streams and make fishing better for the balance of the season. When people leave their cottages and the lake resorts many ar? urtder the impression that the fishing almost is finished. But it is just the reverse and the anglers who brave the elements now should be rewarded with some fine catches But don't forget to dress warm, no matter how the day starts out. BOY. _ 15. TRAPPED IN HURT Caught in Debris in Partial Collapse of Abandoned South Side Plant. Adventure and the romance of abandoned tack factory at Standard avenue and Division street Tuesday. John Collins. 15. of 921 Chase street, suffered severe injuries when the roof caved in and buried him in the debris. The boy was treated at city hospital for a fractured right leg and injuries of the face.Whest and ryes. Sam Cash. 905 Chase street, who was exploring the old building with young Collins escaped injury. Police reported the walls of the building near collapse. ASSAILS TAX REBELLIONS State Retailers’ Official Declares Striking Is Not Advisable. Tax strikes were condemned as being a wrong method of solving present governmental problems by G. Fred Wiedman. executive secretary of the Associated Retailers of Indiana, in addressing the Marion county division at the Severin Tuesday night. President R. A. Graham of the local group presided.

Times Offers Third Free Lesson in Filmland Tango

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LODGE PROTEST ON COAL CODE Operators Dispute Provision Regulating Usage of Scrip. BY GEORGE SANFORD HOLMES Times Special Writer WASHINGTON. Sept. 27—Coal operators are protesting the provisions in the proposed retail code regulating the use of scrip in company stores and commissaries. Representatives of the industry from Alabama. Pennsylvania and West Virginia lodged their protest personally with Deputy Administrator Whiteside, in charge of the retail code, and tre filing a brief asking its elimination. The plans to eliminate the clause were formulated in the offices of the National Coal Association here. The operators claim that the coal code provision which prevents an employer from compelling an employe to deal with a company store, eliminates the necessity of the company stores section in the retail code. The retail code, as now drawn, prohibits merchants from accepting nonnegotiable scrip. It also restrains them from accepting any negotiable scrip not redeemable at par by the issuer, within one month of the date of issue. The coal operators object to both provisions. Deputy Administrator Whiteside, as a result of the protest, will reconside the section. The Retail Merchants Association of Birmingham. Ala., and representatives of organized labor, who sponsored and indorsed the provision. will insist upon its retention in the final code. DEAThTtOLL IN ITALIAN QUAKE MOUNTS TO 20 10.000 Left Homeless: Public Buildings Filled With 111. Bit I'nitrd Prc*t> ROME. Sept. 27.—Unofficial reports from the provinces indicated today that between fifteen and twenty persons were killed in the earthquake that shook Italy and northern Jugoslavia. Approximately 200 persons were injured, most of them slightly. Two hundred houses ccllapsed and 1,000 more damaged in Chieti province. Public buildings left standing and fit for habitation were filled with ill and wounded. Approximately 10.000 of the city's 74.000 population were homeless. India since 1927 has sold an average of 35,000.000 ounces of silver each year. °fl L 6494 FOR GOOD , DRY CLEANING French STMAM DYE WORKS I rh * * I Main Plant, lit 7 West Maryland St | RIGS. DRAPERIES, CARPETS H \TS Cleaned nml Dyed FCKS | Lydia E. Pinkham’s Tablets Relieve and Control Periodic Pains Clinical tests prove it. Take them today for welcome ease and cornton. Take them regularly for permanent relief. No narcotics. No dizziness. No unpleasant effects. Sold by all Small bos Larger tut, if you prefer.

How the third step in the Hollywood tango is executed is shown here by Dorothy Wilson, R. K. O. screen star and her partner, Gene LaVerne, dance instructor, who is giviftg free instruction, this week on the Indiana roof in cooperation w' it h The Times. An analytic diagram of the step is shown below.

Clip Story and Receive Instructions on Roof at Indiana. The third step in the Hollywood tango, which The Times and the Indiana roof are teaching Times readers free each day this week, is illustrated above by Gene La Verne, dance instructor, with glamorous Dorothy Wilson, RKO screen star, as his partner. A diagram, which analyzes the step, is also shown. The third step is performed as follows; 1. Step forward with the left foot. 2. Swing forward with the left foot. 2. Swing right foot off the floor in half circles to the right, turning left foot as you do before placing it on the floor. 3. Slide left foot up to right foot. You are now standing as illustrated in the above photograph. From this point on, the remaining three steps of the dance became very beautiful and fascinating. Don't miss them. Thursday’s lesson will be the fourth step, illustrated by Gene La Verne, and Jean Harlow, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer screen star, with complete diagrams and descriptions. Clip out the above photograph as it will be referred to in later lessons. Free instructions under the personal direction of La Verne will be given to Times Readers on the Indiana Roof starting at 7:30 tonight. All you have to do is clip this story and show it to the roof doorman, who will admit you free.

Low Round Trip Coach Fares Next Saturday CLEVELAND $4.50 Leave 10:00 p. m. or 10:50 p. m. Return on any train until 3:00 a. m. Monday. DETROIT $4.50 TOLEDO $4.00 Leave 10:00 p. m. Return on any train Sunday. Next Sunday ST. LOUIS $4.50 Leave 12:35 a. m., 2:45 a. m. or 8:15 a m. Return on any train same day. CINCINNATI $2.50 Greensburg, $1.25. Shelbyville, 75c. Leave 7:45 a. m. Return on any train same day. Visit Fred Beebe's World Series Rodeo, at Redland Field, Cincinnati, Sept. 30 to October Bth. Ask About Greatly Reduced Round Trip Week-End Fares to all points. Big Four Route Restful, enjoyable travel with personal y. x porters—free pillow service—and no local stop delays. Great Eastern serves more territory and a larger population than any bus company in the world! Abo LOW FARES r* CHICAGO <3.7S—COLUMBUS $4 LOUISVILLE 2.30 - ST. LOUISSS-WTTSBGH 7.25 NEW YRK 13.75 - PHILAPHiA 12.25 - DAYTN2.7S CINCIN Tl 2.75 -WASHTN 12.25 - IS ANGLS27.SO —and hundreds of other cities. Bargain NEW YORK ALL-EXPENSE TOUR <37 Write, or phone RILEY 9666 UNION BUS STATION 125 WEST MARKETST.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

—Dietz on Science — UNIVERSE SOON TO START ERA OF CONTRACTION Theory of Savants Based on Study of Light of Nebulae. BY DAVID DIETZ SeripDS-Howard Science Editor Our astronomical explorations are journeys in time as w'ell as in space. The significance of this fact, almost entirely ignored # by astronomers to date, is made the basis of a new theory of the state of the universe by Professor Janet H. Clark of Johns Hopkins University. Johns Hopkins university, their light takes from four to more than 100.000 years to reach us. When the astronomer says that the nearest star is four and a third lightyears away, he means that its light takes that long to reach the earth. Now all the stars are in motion. Therefore, we never see any star where it really is today. We see one star where it was four and a third years ago, another star where it was 100 years ago, still another where it was 50,000 years ago and so on. The first investigator, to the best of my knowledge, to call attention to the significance of this was Colonel John Millis of Cleveland, who published a paper in 1931, titled "Unrealities of the Visible Skies." Colonel Millis pointed out that in any study of the distribution of the stars we must take into account this differential in time. Spirals Billion Y'ears Away Professor Clark carries the same idea to the spiral nebulae. The spirals, some of them great clouds of gases, and some of them huge aggregations of stars, are not within our galaxy or Milky Way at all. The nearest is about 250,000 light years away, the most distant, more than a billion light years away. A number of astronomers have pointed out that when we study the very distant spiral nebulae, we are observing them by “fossil light.” We are, in a very real sense, looking back into the past history of the universe. But no further cognizance of that fact was taken in the recent formulation of theories of the expanding universe. These theories are based upon observation of the light of the distant nebulae with the spectroscope. These observations all show the famous “red shift." Spectrum Lines Shifted That is, the lines of the spectrum are shifted toward the red end. Now the only satisfactory interpretation of such a shift is that the nebulae are receding from the earth. The studies have shown that the farther away the nebula is, the more rapidly it is receding from the earth. The most distant one studied, 150,000,000 light years away, appears to be speeding away from us at the rate of 15,000 miles a second.

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Instructions in Contract Bridge

BY W. E. MKENNEY Secretary American Bridge League 1 DON'T believe that you can count up the number of high card tricks in one hand, add it to the number in partner's hand and in that manner determine whether or not you can make a game or slam. I have seen too many hands holding six or seven tricks between them have difficulty in even game.; while many hands that had only two to four tricks between them made a game and even a slam. However, aces do play an important part in slam bidding, and when your partner starts making aggressive bids and slam invitations and you hold two aces and a solid suit, j don't be afraid to get into seven. Several players missed a grand j slam on the following hand because ! they were afraid of their doubleton j diamond. South bids one heart, and West, who is vulnerable, should not overcall with two diamonds. North bids one spade—this is a one over one force. If South held a doubleton dia- j mond. I believe his next bid should be two clubs. However, he is void of diamonds, and has the jack and | one of his partner's suit. non 1 BELIEVE that he should make a slam try bid of three clubs. This is a forcing bid. assuring game, but at the same time it is a mild slam try. North should bid four clubs to show the fit in clubs. South's next bid should be five hearts. While North holds only a doubleton heart, South’s bid has clearly indicated to him that the heart suit is practically solid. South is not afraid of 'making five hearts, even though North holds a singleton, so that the ten and x constitute good support. It is true that North has a doubleton diamond, but he has two aces and South is inviting a slam, so the correct response by North is seven hearts—not six. West should not make the misMIXTURE OF SOAP AND CAMPHOR GOOD FOR ACHING FEET Sweaty, blistered, aching feet, corns, callouses and bunions are relieved of pain and tenderness by a mixture of liquid soap, camphor and menthol. Use in foot bath. This toughens tender skin. For a few cents you can purchase this reliable prescription, already prepared, by asking for a bottle of "SHOOT" at Hook’s, Haag’s, V.'algreen’s and other drug stores. Use "•SKOOT” twice a week and you will never be troubled with foot misery again.—Advertisement.

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take of doubling simply because he holds the ace of diamonds. If he can win his ace of diamonds, he can rest assured that he will have a very good score on the ooard.

VACATE ! WE MUST BE OUT BY OCTOBER 1. JUST 3 DAYS LEFT TO GET THESE BARGAIN'S—SATURDAY LAST DAY. Specials Hip Boots $2.95 Ladies’ Riding Breeches $1,95 Gallon Vacuum Jugs 590 Canvas Cots $1.45 Army Lockers $3.95 Camp Chairs 150 7x9 Wall Tents $7.95 25 to 50% Discounts on numerous other items of cur large and varied stock of Camping and Sporting goods—games and game equipment—golf bags and clubs—luggage—come in and look it over, before we move. JACOBS OUTDOOR SHOP 15 N. Pennsylvania St. - AFTER SATURDAY 9 East Ohio St.—Board of Trade Bldg. 1 f“Yes, Alice.. I'm convinced . . it's better to buy Quality Many of our customers have come to us recently with this statement. They, like every one else, had followed the crowd in seeking bargains. But they learned after a while that what they called bargains turned out to be more expensive in the long run than if they had spent a little more money and bought better quality. For cheap, shoddy merchandise is never a bargain. e • • • No Fuss or Muss . . . Just Turn the Switch and Ftirnish the Dirty Clothes! ‘Paramount | ! ==§JijKc 5 1=Down-* I=a Week si • • • • Here’s the last word in Gas Ranges The “ODIN”* M jTTyIS Beauty Range /j * — lt’s Beautiful I —W, Efficient M 4 / off-00/ Indianapolis’ greatest range value—with JJ) . / table top and the new A. G. A. approved s. v / gas saving burners. Sparkling sanitary / green or tan stucco ivory finish. / Directly Opposite Statehon**

| while if his ace of diamonds is trumped, as the bidding has indicated it will be, he is sure to receive a poor score on the board. iCopyrieht. 1933, bv NEA Service, Inc.i ROBS U. S.: GETS BARS Ex-Princeton Official Given 2-Year Term in Fund Theft. !ty Vnifrti Picas EVANSVILLE. Ind.. Sept. 27. Oceon Powell. 46. former assistant •postmaster at Princeton, was sentenced to two years in prison Tuesday on embezzlement charges. He pleaded guilty at Indianapolis last week and was sentenced by Judge Thomas W. Slick. South Bend. Powell admitted taking 5432 in postal funds. He needed the money to pay his debts, he said. Anew traveling wash kit for motorists is a neat can which holds water and soap for a quick rnse.

J-SEPT. 27, 1933

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