Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 190, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 December 1933 — Page 6
PAGE 6
SQUIRREL ARMY TREK STILL TO REACH INDIANA March Which Started in East Reported at Columbus. 0. Reported invasion of the middle •western states by a horde of thousands of migrating squirrels has not reached Indiana yet. At least game wardens working under the direction of Kennetn Kunkel, director of state conservation, have not noticed the big trek of the little fellows which started in New York, Connecticut and Massachusetts two weeks ago and was reported Friday to have progressed to Columbus. O. “Were perfectly willing to go ‘nutty' in Indiana again" said Mr. Kunkel. Crossed Ohio River “Three years ago, the state was invaded by an army of squirrels which swam the Ohio river in great multitudes. The hunters here were delighted. I sent game wardens to ; the Ohio and saw that the squirrels j were welcomed into the state with j open arms." On Dec. 13. forest workers near Buffalo. N. Y.. reported seeing thousands of the animals swimming the Hudson at Highland. Like Suicidal Migration On Friday, Dec. 15. the vanguard of the invading host swept into Columbus, O, which caused public denials to be made there that the na- ! tive squirrels at the statehouse had j invited the influx while the legis- | lature wrangled about the Ohio liquor laws. “Nobody seems to know how far they go,” said George G. Goodwin, assistant to the curator of mam- | mals at the American Museum of Natural History. “The situation is comparable to the movements of the lemmings < rodents) in Norway, where thousands of them go out to sea and are drowned every year.” ZONING BOARD DENIES FUNERAL HOME SITE Petition for Poultry Store .Also Is Turned Down. Permission to convert a residence l at 3918 North Illinois street to busi- j ness use, filed by George Kincaid, j funeral director, was denied yes- j terday by the zoning appeals board. | The board also denied petition of Earl G. Haupt to use a retail store at 2541 North Delaware street as a poultry store, and approved request of C. H. and L. Wiebke to construct a one-story storeroom at 1528 Montcalm street. Burned Critically by Lye His face burned badly when lye on a stove boiled over early today, William Shannon. 48. Negro, 438 East Wabash street, was in serious condition at city hospital.
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BUTLER ORGANIZATIONS AID CHARITY
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Left to Right—Phyllis Minter, Frances Noll, Helen VVentnight and Howard Campbell ikneeling), chairman.
“Eds and co-eds” at Butler university are busy this week with their annual Christmas cheer campaign. They are delving into old closets, attics and rummaging about fraternity and sorority houses looking for old clothes, shoes and other wearing apparel. Organized as a contest, with the
Pacific Northwest Flood Is Shown in Newsreel
Other Interesting Features in Times-Universal Picture. Striking scenes in the Pacific Northwest where six are dead after heavy rains and wind storms caused great damage, are to be seen in th° current issue of The Times-Univer-sal Newsreel. Graham McNamee, noted radio announcer and the screen’s talking reporter, describes this and the other events in the reel. Rising to record levels, rivers inundate the nearby highways, making them impassable, while thousands are forced to leave their homes in the flood region. Terrific winds cause thousands of dollars damage and injure hundreds of persons. Other news events in the reel described by McNamee, include scenes at Los Angeles, Calif., where racing drivers risk their lives in a contest for the Pacific Coast title; views at Sabina, 0., where a 108-year-old man goes hunting alone; views at Rankin, Pa., where four are hurt when a bridge collapses; scenes at Nara, Japan, as priest clip the antlers of stags in a public
C. B. Dyer trophy at stake, each campus organization is doing its utmost to win the prize. The contest will close Monday evening. So far, Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority is in the lead. Food and clothing collected during the campaign will be distributed through Indianapolis welfare societies.
park; views at Chillicothe , Ohio, where “The Sportsman,” crack express train of the Chesapeake and Ohio railroad, was wrecked, killing two men; exclusive pictures of a cocktail mixing contest at Los Angeles, Calif.; views at Miami, Fla., as Frances Harrell and Viola Gentry are forced to land by high winds which prevent them from contacting their refueling plane during an endurance flight; views at Guanajuato, Mexico, where an English prospector discovers a fabulously rich gold mine; exclusive pictures as Moslem crowds battle the police at a religious festival in Tanta, Egypt, and exclusive pictures of two men starting from New York City for Miami on roller skates. The Times newsreel is being shown at the following theatres: Alamo, 152 North Illinois street; Circle, Monument Circle; Dream 2351 Station street; Garfield, 2203 Shelby street; Garrick, 2961 North Illinois street; Granada, 1045 Virginia avenue; Howard, Blaine avenue and Howard street; Rivoli, East Tenth street at Dearborn; R,oosevelt, 1431 South Meridian street; Tacoma, 2442 East Washington street; Zaring, 2741 Central avenue, and Indiana (Negro), 410 Indiana avenue.
. TfTfi INDIANAPOLIS TIMES *.
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DEC. 19, 1933
