Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 43, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 June 1934 — Page 2

PAGE 2

—Let’s Go Fishing— STATE STREAMS LOW. CLEAR. IS CHEERING WORD Good Catches Reported in All Sections Except Southern. BY GEORGE H. DENNY Timci tubing Editor A glance over the wardens' reports lor the week-end is encouraging. Streams generally are low and clear and good catches are being made except in some southern parts, where waters still are muddy. You ll find tnat your luck is better in the early morning or evening of these hot days. Pick your spot and don t be discouraged by the full moon. Here they are: Lake and Porter Counties—Warden Bartock reports lakes all clear and fish biting well. Kankakee river clearing old river bed and bayous all clear. White County—Warden Roth writes that Shafer and Freeman lakes are clear and bass are hitting early and late. Tippecanoe river very low and fishing as poor. Marshall and Starke Counties— Warden Sloan reports that rams of the last few davs have muddied the Tippecanoe and Yellow rivers a bit, but fish still are hiring. Every one is taking fish from the lakes and it is interesting to note that few want the limit, but are satisfied with enough for their needs. 'That's the finest news yet.) Tippecanoe High, Muddy Kosciusko County—Warden Eaton S rites that the Tippecanoe is high {nd muddy at this point due to a fegular cloudburst on Wednesday night. Lakes low and catches good. ■3ass and fine, large redeyes taken from Wawasee on night crawlers! and soft craws. Bluegills coming a little slow. Checked 263 boats with 490 fishermen and every one had a license 'More good news.) Cass and Miami Counties—Warden McClean reports water cloudy, fish not biting in Wabash and Eel rivers. Some bluegills, crappie and , bass taken from Lake Cicoft. Clinton, Boone and Hamilton Counties—Warden Anderson savs the weather is too hot and few fish are being taken. Jay. Adams. Wells and Blackford Counties Warden Hanlin writes ; that bass are going for live bait m ! the Salamonie, Wabash and St. Mary's rivers. Fish biting well in the pits, and all streams clear, with ■ channel cat and some crappies bexng taken. Channel Cat Biting Randolph. Delaware and Madison Counties—Warden ImhofT reports' streams low and roily; some bass : taken from the Mississmewa and Killbuck creek. Wayne, Fayette and Union Counties—Warden Marksbury writes that | streams are low. cloudy, full of moss and not in the best condition, but bass, crappie and bluegills are being taken from Memorial park lakes m Henry county.: Morgan and Johnson Counties — Warden Fulford reports that White river is muddy, Sugar creek cloudy and Blue river clear. Channel cat biting well. Two cats weighing seven and eight pounds taken from Sugar creek. Noble and DeKalb Counties—Warden Grossman reports recent rains ■ have helped all rivers and lakes. | Bass and bluegills bit mg very well. Several large bass taken. Benton, Warren and Fountain | Counties—Warden Meredith says that streams are too low T for good fishing. Rush and Decatur Counties—Warden Lacey states Big and Little Flatrock. Clifty. Big and Little Blue. Big Four reservoir and Lake McCoy all clear and low. Muscatatuck low 'and milky and Sand creek milkv. Not many bass taken from the streams, but lots of bluegills caught in the lakps and ponds. Vigo. Parke and Clav Counties— Warden Morgan reports all streams clear and will be in fine shape lor ! the week-end. Montgomery and Tippecanoe Counties—Warden White writes that; streams are very low but fishing, is good. Walter Warren took a five-pound nine ounce big mouth | from Sugar creek, near Darlington, on a plug, and his companion, Harry Campbell, landed a small mouth just over three and one-half pounds, also on a plug. Putnam and Owen Counties—All streams are muddy, writes Warden Riley. Crawford. Harrison and Perry’ Counties—'Warden Ketchem reports nearly all streams too muddy for game fishing. Bartholomew County Warden Herron reoprts all streams muddy and in poor shape. Some gravel pits in fair shape. Flatrock may be clear by the week-end. Important announcement; Beginning next Monday, there will be a "Let's Go Fishing'’ column every day, except Saturday. The dope is piling up on us and room must be found for it. Look for this department five times a week, beginning Monday. BREAKS NECK AT WORK Laborer Injured Trying to Jerk Shovel Out of Gravel. B y Tuor.* spre-al BOMOSSEN, Vt.. June 30 Wielding a shovel proved a hazardous occupation for Knute Bergman. He fractured his neck while jerking the shovel out of the ground.

Real Estate Mortgages

WE SOLICIT APPLICATIONS FOR PREFERRED MORTGAGE LOANS ON CITY PROPERTY. INTEREST RATE 6%—NO COMMISSION.

THE INDIANA TRUST 3SI& $2,000,000.00 THE OLDEST TRI ST COMPANY IN INDIANA

■THANK GOD, THEY WERE MY OWN SONS,’ HEARTBROKEN DOCTOR WEEPS

• Thank God they were my own sons.’’ said Dr. Bryan L. Baldwin. Healdsburg, Cal., fighting to save the life of his boy. Bobby. 7. dangerously ill from contaminated anti-infantile paralysis serum which the father administered and which caused the death of Jackie. 2. Bobby's brother. Both boys, in good

INOCULATION TO RE REPEATED 80 New Bethelites to Get Second ‘Shot’ of Serum Tomorrow. The eighty residents of New Bethel, who last Saturday received the first "shots ' in a mass antityphoid inoculation of the village's population, were to receive the second dose of serum today in the New Bethel high school. The inoculation was arranged and supervised by Dr. Oscar D. Ludwig, county health commissioner, as part of the state-county campaign against the Typhoid epidemic which, in approximately three weeks, took one life and made eleven persons ill. The epidemic apparently is completely under control now. since no new cases have been reported in the last ten days. Sanitation work is proceeding in the village. LEADS BUSINESS DRIVE Local Insurance Manager Named Company Director. L. S. Schafer, manager of the Indianapolis agency ol the Ohio State Life Insurance Company. 405 New City Trust building, has been named a director of the campaign arranged for July by the field force in commemoration of the twentyeighth anniversary of the founding of the company.

War Planes for Bolivia May Be Held in U. S.

State Department Studies Pleas to Lift Embargo for Shipment. ft a scripps-Hnicarit Xetcs paper Alliance WASHINGTON, June 30.—Pres- ! sure was being exerted on the state I department today to permit the shipment to Bolivia of a number of war planes now nearing completion in two American plants. President Roosevelt's recent embargo proclamation forbade sale of any war supplies to either Bolivia or Paraguay, but the state department has exempted such materials as were contracted for. paid for at least in part, and fully manufactured in advance of the proclamation. This exception did not cover the airplanes. These ships, equipped with machine gun emplacements and other warlike appurtenances, were contracted for but still in the production stage when the proclamation was issued. They will be ready for shipment | beginning next month, if the state department permits. The Bolivian legation has formally requested such permission, but no reply has vet been dispatched. The manufacturers, fearing a heavy loss, also have applied for an exemption. The planes are of such design as to make their sale for commercial purposes difficult, it was said. VIRGINIA AVENUE TO BE REPAVED BY CITY Labor Will Be Furnished by Relief Administration. Plans to repave Virginia avenue from the railroad elevation to 790 feet south of the elevation were approved yesterday by the works board. The labor will be furnished by the federal emergency relief administration. Bricks for the project will be obtained from Northwestern avenue. which is being resurfaced. KEEPSABREASTAT 106 Vermont Woman Reads Daily and Listens to Radio. HOQUIAM. Wash. June 30 Though she recently entered her 106th year. Mrs. Susan Lee Parsons is keenly interested in current events. An ardent radio fan. she also insists that the newspapers are i read to her daily.

health, were inoculated to safeguard them in the California epidemic. Dr. Baldwin, shown left in a recent picture with Jackie, vows he will devote his life to saving other children. Mrs. Baldwin is shown at right with Bobby.

Indiana in Brief

Bil Times Special TIPTON. June 30.- Trial of a $20,000 damage suit against John Spearman, former Howard county sheriff, and members of the Kokomo police department, in which Mrs. Maude Harness is plaintiff, is in progress in Tipton circuit court. The case was brought here from Howard county on a change of venue and is being heard by a jury. Mrs. Harness was injured when she entered her home at night and stepped into an opening in a floor from which several boards had been removed by officers during a liquor raid.

ana Building Near Finish B ;/ Times Special WEST LAFAYETTE. June 30Work on the first unit of new residenc halls for women at Purdue university will be completed in August, it is expected. The unit will provide living quarters for 125 girls. All freshman girls whose homes are outside of Lafayette will be expected to live in a residence hall. nan Mother of 20 Dies B’j Times Special KOKOMO, June 30—Funeral services w’ere held today for Mrs. Cresia Moore, 64, mother of George Moore, who the mother of twenty children. The Moore family, residents of Kokomo for seven years, came here from Shaw. Miss. ana Mail Men to Meet Bn Times Special LEBANON. June 30.—Thirty-sec-ond state convention of the Indiana Rural Letter Carriers Association and its women's auxiliary will be held here July 15 to 17. Attendance of about 800 is expected.

SLAYER OF SON IS GIVEN 2-21 YEARS City Man Pleads Guilty to Manslaughter Charge. Everett Arbuckle, 43, of 734 Elm street, confessed slayer of his 19-year-old son in a beer brawl at a downtown dance hall, yesterday pleaded guilty to involuntary manslaughter and was sentenced to 2 to 21 years at the state prison by Criminal Judge Frank P. Baker. Arbuckle originally was indicted on first and second-degree murder charges and had entered a not guilty plea. Penitent and in tears, Arbuckle today told Judge Baker, “I am sorry for the trouble I have caused you and my family.” Arbuckle stabbed his son, Noah Arbuckle, 19, because the son rushed in to prevent an argument between Arbuckle and his wife, Mrs. Vera Arbuckle, 42. Mrs. Arbuckle was wounded in the melee. 2.925 GRADE PUPILS TAUGHT IN FINE ARTS John Herron Institute Classes Represented 68 Schools. During the nine months of the school year just ended. 2.925 pupils representing sixty-eight Indianapolis public schools were given fine art instruction at the John Herron art institute, the museum announced today. Three teachers were in charge of the children. Miss Anna Hasselman. Miss June Woodworth and Miss Constance Forsyth gave twenty-two Saturday morning lessons and Miss Woodworth gave seventeen Saturday afternoon lessons. Children were chosen by their respective schools for free tuition. Gallery talks and lectures were given to all groups by Miss Hasselman. museum curator. Children's work consisted of drawing museum objects and free expression drawing and painting.

Gone, but Not Forgotten

Automobiles reported to police as stolen belong to: Thomas H Coen, 2438 North New Jersev street, apartment 4 Ford convertible c oupe, 114-093, from Perry stadium. Rolland O Haver 4548 Manlove avenue Ford roadster. 47-698, from Perry stadium Goldie Jones, 1333 Beecher street. Ford sedan. 43-620. from G and J. parking lot Joe Hanson. 134 .North Oriental street. Ford coupe, from In front of 134 North Oriental street.

BACK HOME AGAIN

Stolen automobiles recovered by police belong toOrville Pruett. 2318 Brookside avenue. Chevrolet coach, found near Twentv-smh street beach, stuck in gravel I Steinecker R. R 'B. Box 381A. Buick sedan, found in front of 28 West Nineteenth street L D Bfiinberrv. Danville. Tnd.. Buick sedan, found on State road 8, near Marion. J. G Neff 502' South East street. Continental coupe, found near Fountain Square. Fonts Auto Company. 3030 West Washington street Ford sedan, found at Tenth street and We.rman avenue B uck sedan motor number 314608 M 3. no license plates, found at Troy avenue and Harding street. The first chartered life insurance company in the United States is still in business, it was chartered in 1759 and it* original title consisted of twenty-two words.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TRIES

COLLINS IS SPEAKER Former Criminal Judge to Talk to Rotary Club. Former Criminal Judge James A. Collins will address the Indianapolis Rotary Club, of which he is an honorary member, at a luncheon Tuesday. is subject will be “Whither Are We Drifting?’’

Household Goods for Sale - YOU are going.to refurnish your home In Indianapolis there are hundreds of • people who are in the market for good used Every day The Times, through its Want Tr "~ 1 Ad columns, reaches a great audience of the very people you want to meet, and you can . . . quick results. It's the Shopping Center for Thousands in Indianapolis

TWO WARSHIPS CRASH IN FOG: 6 JAPANESE DIE Rear End of Destroyer Is j Torn Away by Impact of Collision. B>J I nitcrl Press SASEBO NAVAL BASE. Japan. ■June 30—Japan recorded its second i naval disaster in less than four | months today as small craft searched the sea for sailors missing after two destroyers crashed in heavy fog during secret maneuvers. Six lives were lost and a score injured when the destroyer Inazuma rammed the destroyer Miyuki at sea off Quelparte island last night, the navy department announced. Three sailors on the Miyuki were killed instantly by the terrific impact when the two crafts crashed under full steam. Tivo sailors attached to the Miyuki were missing and one seaman on the Inazuma was killed. It was believed the missing men had drowned. Both ships carried 212 men and it was considered miraculous that more were not killed or injured. The collision followed by less than four months the Tomozuru disaster, in which more than 100 men were lost when the imperial navy's newest fighting unit capsized during maneuvers. An officer of the Miyuki said the Inazuma, appearing suddenly like a ghost ship in the fog-enshrouded sea, crashed full speed into the Miyuki. The rear portion of the destroyer was torn away. Watertight bulkheads kept both vessels afloat while other nearby naval craft rushed to their assitance. Brewery Suit Dismissed A suit demanding that a receiver be appointed for the Gold Medal Brewing Company was dismissed yesterday by Circuit Judge Earl Cox on request of the plaintiff, Louis Guhlke. A private settlement had been made, it was reported.

CRASH COSTS LIFE OF FAMED FLIER

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Standing grotesquely on her nose, here is the wreckage of the plane in which Jimmy Wedell, famed airman and speed flier, met his death while instructing a student flier over Patterson, La. The ship nosedived into a rice field from a 300-foot, altitude.

CODE LUMBER SLASH NOT EFFECTIVE HERE 10 Per Cent Cut Ordered by National Group. By T'nited Press WASHINGTON, June 20—The National Retail Lumber Dealers’ Association, through its code authority, today announced a 10 per

cent reduction of prices on lumber and building material as a contribution to the administration's building program. Spencer D. Baldwin, association president, estimated the reduction would save home owners at least $60,000,000. The reduction order applies to 20.000 dealers. The 10 per cent "reduction announced yesterday in Washington is not likely to affect local lumber prices, according to R. S. Foster, head of the organized local lumber retailers.

.TONE 30, 1934

G.G.P. PRESS ■ TO NAME SITE FORMEETIN6 Editors, Party Heads Will Visit Lakes to Plan Annual Outing. A committee will visit Lakes Wawasee and Manitou this afternoon to decide on a site for the annual outing of the Republican Editorial Association in September, when the Republican fall campaign will be launched officially. Republican candidates met here Wednesday with State Chairman Don Irwin. It was decided to eliminate the so-called candidates’ emomittee which in past campaigns has operated independently of the state committee. Decision to drop the candidates’ committee was regarded as significant of peace in the Republican camp because it has been reported that Senator Arthur R. Robinson might use the candidates’ organization to wage an independent campaign. Apparently, the breach caused by his fight with the state committee prior to the state convention has been closed. 11l in Washington, Senator Robinson did not attend the meeting Wednesday. He was represented by Arch Mersey, one of his secretaries, and George R. Jeffrey, former district attorney. Members of the committee which will decide on a site for the editorial outing are Mr. Irwin, Harry C. Fenton, state committee secretary; Harry Thompson, Versailles, president of the editorial association; Neil McCallum, Batesville, association secretary, and Paul Bausman, Washington, former president of the association. Mr. Irwin will meet with Republican congressional nominees next week and July 15 will start a series of organization meetings with county chairmen and vice-chairmen. Dancing-saloon cars are part of the equipment of Czecho-Slovakian trains.