Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 10, Indianapolis, Marion County, 23 May 1934 — Page 5
MAY 23, 1934
—Let's Go Fishing— STATE TROUT NEED CHANCE TO CROW UP Don't Be Greedy. Boys; Just Go Into Michigan, George Advises. BY GEORGE If DENNY rimM Fi.bioi Kdilnr Weeks aco I promised a corrcspnnd'Tir. who Signed himself “Dryfly" that I would assemble him some d'-'p" on trout fishing in Indiana. This much I’ve discovered: No one person knows all the information and there is no one place to get it. The conservation department has been experimenting with trout planting in the northern part of the state for years. They find that for no apparent reason some sections of streams will support the fish while other parts will not. „ In border line districts such as northern Indiana, trout planting is a ticklish business. Stream temperature Ls all-important. The faintest touch of pollution is fatal. Other factors add to the problem. My Phone Number Is Much successful planting has been done by individual sportsmen who have discovered an innocent looking stretch of water that happens to be suitable because it is fed by springs and will maintain a low average temperature through the most punishing summer. Undoubtedly many of the catches of trout in Indiana are the result of such private initiative, and the men responsible for this good work are not broadcasting the locations. You cant blame them for that. They deserve to reap the rewards of their work, and if I knew of such a spot i wouldn't violate the confidence. (My phone number is in the book, boys.) To sum up, between the private atockers and the conservation department. the work is going ahead. There are trout in certain Indiana streams in decent quantities. Another five years may see good sport, but let's be patient and give the fish a real chance to become intrenched. A horde of fishermen descending on the few good spots at this time would undo all the work. Michigan's Better So "Dryfly,” why not keep koing when you start north until you reach one of the hundreds of fine Michigan or Wisconsin streams where you are sure to get trout. I’m starting for the Pere Marquette myself on the third of June and you’re invited. Let’s give Indiana’s infant industry a break because it's the right thing to do and because Indiana trout fishing is not the best yet anyhow. Well, all right, if ydu insist. I’ll tell you this much. It's already been in the paper so I'm not spilling any secrets, and maybe you didn't see it. Forty thousand brown trout were
WHAT GASOLINE HAS 1 0 99 MILLION FOOTPOUNDS GASOLINE I
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FEATURED ARTIST AT SPRING FORMAL DANCE
~JA **- 1 ife-, i ; %Jj %„ * ■ / -Ilf | g S? 4 *'- |fc .^gHm
Jordan Conservatory students will hold their annual spring formal dance at Thirty-fourth and Pennsylvania streets Friday night. Miss Dorothy Prince wil be featured in the floor show. Miss Maxine Mertz is dance chiarman.
released in northern Indiana streams recently by the conservation department. The fish were placed in stretches of the Tippecanoe. Pigeon, i upper Kankakee and Eel rivers and | their tributaries. But. as I said, j please let them grow up. While we're on the subject I can't resist the chance to print some excerpts from a letter received from i “Deac” Miller, a metpber of the Anglers Club of New York. I mentioned my hopes for a trip to Michigan and he replied as follows: “I note with undisguised envy ! your plans to go out of town for some fishing and assure you that I would gladly forfeit one hind leg to be with you. I suppose the anglers in your part of the country are just as critical of the fishing as we are here, but I would like to tell them that they don't know how lucky they are to have the Michigan trout fishing within reach, even if it's not easy reach. “I am going aw’ay myself this week-end. The Anglers Club is holding its annual outing up in the Catskills—“l love the trout fishing traditions of that territory. Up in Beaverkill
Miss Dorothy Prince
village old Rube Crof.s still maintains his pet, bald gamecock—bald because whenever Rube wants to tie a fly for a friend he catches the luckless fowl and plucks out what he needs. "Down in Roscoe, Walter Dette ties the finest American divided wing flies (like Cahills and Quill Gordons) that I have ever seen in a ! commercial fly. "A feature of the outing will* be the annual club competition. On a ! certain day each member will sally I forth for the biggest trout he can catch on a fly and the winner will | have his name on the cup for this I year. “Personally, I plan to use two buektails on a cast—they say the dropper is deadly—and fish the big water, raking the deep, fast runs and | the large pools for a winning fish. That Ls, unless I run into a good fall I of flies, when I much fear that my ‘C’ line and heavy leader will go back in the bag and my favorite salesmen, Mr. Gordon and Mr. Cahill, will step out to see what they i can get a line on.” Good luck, "Deac,” and let us know what happens.
SOUTH BEND DOCTOR ACCUSED OF MURDER Physician Alleged to Have Slain Illegitimate Daughter. By United [‘n s* SOUTH BEND. Ind., May 23. Accused of murdering his illegitimate daughter at birth. Dr. Bareilla M. 'Hutchinson. 48-year-old physician of Mishawaka, Ind.- was held today for action by a grand jury. Mrs. Freida McGrew, 35-year-old widow, wept in court as she told of the child's birth under Dr. Hutchinson’s ministry and of its immediate disappearance. "I heard it cry,” the mother sobbed. "He said the baby was born dead, but I heard it cry.” Not until she read newspaper accounts of the discovery on May 8, a week after the child was born, of the decapitated body of a day-old girl in the St. Joseph river did she cioubt Dr. Hutchinson's word, Mrs. McGrew said. "He wouldn’t tell me what he did with the body,” she testified, "and when I read of the girl found in the river I went right to police.”
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
TRAFFIC TIEUPS ARE THREAT TO RACE DAY FANS Main Bridge Approach Still Under Repair as Big Day Nears. Serious traffic congestion is *in stqre for Speedway .race fans on Decoration day, Chief Mike Morrissey warned motorists today. Because of roads, streets and bridges under repair in and near Indianapolis, traffic hazards threaten to becorm serious this year, he declared. Emrichsville bridge, the main arterial approach to the Speedway, is under repair at the present time and unless the construction work is completed before May 30. may result in snarled traffic on race day. Visitors to Indianapolis will find the Rational road, near Cumberland, in the state of repair and all traffic east of the city must be detoured. Construction work on Northwestern avenue, on State Road 35 near Morgantown and on the National road west of the city, threatens to prove hazardous to motorists, Chief Morrissey said.
Indianapolis Tomorrow
Alliance Francaise, dinner, Washington. Acacia, luncheon. Board of Trade. Advertising Club, luncheon, Columbia Club. Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers, dinner. Washington. American Business Club, luncheon. Columbia Club. Federal Business Men’s Club, luncheon, Washington. United Lutheran church Indiana synod, St. Mark's Lutheran church, Indiana Funeral Directors’ Assoall day. : ciation, fairground, all day. Indiana Law School, dinner, Claypool. Indiana Poetry Society, Claypool, 7:30 p. m. Indiana Bankers’ Association, Claypool, all day. Sigma Nu, luncheon, Washington. Rea) Estate Board, luncheon, Washington. Ulini Club, luncheon, Columbia Club. Shrine Caravan Club, luncheon, Scottish Rite Cathedral. Sigma Chi, luncheon, Board of 1 ade. Engineering Society, luncheon, Board of Trade. REROUTING IS PROPOSED Works Board to Hold Public Hearing on June 1. The works board will hold a public hearing June 1 on the rerouting of three street car lines. The lines are Prospect street, Garfield park and Madison avenue. Indianapolis Railways, Inc., has asked permission to change from street cars to trackless trolleys on the lines. Fred Hoke to Give Talk Fred Hoke, Indiana NRA director, will address members of the Young Democratic Club of Indianapolis at the Claypool tonight. His subject will be "The Future of NRA.”
‘Answer rue please!” “ ri,es C\ ULC]LiT^CrcjUi \ ... 'dm A mild cigarette is not necessarily easy on the i throat. Like a mild-mannered person, it may be flat, uninteresting and even irritating. J “Smoothness” is mildness with character. A y/ Hp?'. : smooth cigarette, like a smooth wine, has every--0 wkt'''' ■ thing . . . taste-appeal, mellowness and purity. \ a- I ”t Wt' Old Gold tobacco is not only mild ... it has jW*/ that combination flavor and throat-ease I . jjS|l| Sincerely JH| .'ESTABLISHED 1760 No better tobacco grows than is used in Old Gold. And it's pure. That's why Old Golds are r cd^k Glncer Rogers, now appealing in Warner Bros, musical "TWENTY MILLION SWEETHEARTS” A !V1 IRI C\S CICARITTI
CRIME LECTURER
Dr. James H. Peeling
An address upon the crime situation in the nation will be made by Dr. James H. Peeling of the College of Education of Butler university Friday night in the Washington before the Indianapolis Federation of Community Civic Clubs. Paul C. Wetter is president.
OiD YOU KA/OWr- __ PERFUMED BUTTER 15 SERVED IN MANY RESTAURANTS IN PARIS* • and do you know that Butterscotch ROLLS AND PURE BUTTER HAVE BECOME A MUCH TALKED OF ITEM AT SEVILLE Try Them at Lunch Time Tomorrow! WASHINGTON AT MERIDIAN
SOVIET AIR TRAIN IS FORCED TO HALT TRIP Monoplane and Three Gliders Make Landing at Zaporojia. H V ( nili (t I’rrtf MOSCOW. May 23. —Soviet Russia's pioneer air train, "P-5.’ w.th its monoplane "locomotive" and
iR This Year's Brides Are Lucky Ladies h We Have Never Known Such Fashions Outstanding Value! I: Bridal Gowns m s 9Vl6 .s i / I V have been for years. We have never known such \ fl \I m significant fashions at such insignificant prices. Li /i\l \ The Fair can save you money so go ahead, plan I 1l: /II | I yOUr wec^*n £ as y° u ’ ve always dreamed it would he. j||l j j I | Bridesmaids’ Frocks Is I J • \ | \ ' More Outstanding in Style Than Ever Before | l| k Bridal Veils Bridal Veiling /I j m V* ■ New veil Col_ a t\r Any br i and e looks /If ;i|ii:#A 1 \ rectly styled ,CS 49 m g ■■■■■ ; :'i:.AA a \ , M * lovelier in a veil. OM *^ t/ B / JB \\- A for the modern W / % >L-3 bride - * Yard JL GLOVES Exquisite Silk „ For i r irst Quality l uve X UNDIES CTT K unur rp . , WHITE • FLESH • TEA ROSE OlLilV Bride chemise new colors - all sizes <3 Qrf l „ STEPINS Oort: eoll * ASS Styled white M D^ETTE S £ M Saves stL P ® U*. * I ZtfmZ'.l ..<#■ C gIO\CS. Sizes jay t rimmed. nil pure ml wen ri ti fat MMmBH} to 8. d&F silt; in regular sizes HH points. s. Ohe. Store of Oneatcr \JcdjU4A. Wishing rarh. im i A ■■ \ sllceess In ' THE FAIR)
three trailing gliders, was reporteld today to have made a forced landing near Zaporojia. The dispatch said the train would resume its flight for its terminus at Koktobel. in the Crimea. With Pilot Fedosiev in charge, the train left Moscow yesterday for Koktobel. 930 miles away planning one intermediate stop.
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coßNsrri For quick, safe relief f '9 from painful corns or r, tender toes and pressure of tight shoes. EtflHatfH Df Scholls lino-pads TRY A WANT AD IN THE TIDIES.
