Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 44, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 July 1934 — Page 16

PAGE 16

—Let's Go Fishing— TROUT FURNISH THRILLS GALORE FOR ANGLERS Baby Will Have to Use Old Shoes When Papa Needs New Fly Rod. BY GEORGE H. DENNY Timn rt'hinc Editor You anglers who soon will be on the way to the northern lakes in pursuit of bass, pike, musky or the various pan fish, may we whisper a. word or two about this trout fishing business? If you're like many Waltonians that i know your ideas on the subject are something on this order: • Why should I bother about a few eight-inch fingerhngs in some brush-lmed stream when the lakes are full of tackle -smashing bass, musky, etc? “The cost is too great. I couldn't get out for less than fiftv bucks on the waders, light fly rod. fi" and leader boxes and other special and expensive paraphernalia. "Too much work for too little meat in the pan. One big ba.>s or pike w ill weigh more than ten average brookies. • It takes too long to learn all the tricks. I only get away lor a week or so each year and I want to catch fish while I have the chance." Collect Tarkle Slowly Now these complaints will take some answering, but if you'll bear with me a minute I'll try. It would be silly, of course, to march into a sporting goods store and lay a number of dollars on the line for trout tackle with no real idea of what you wanted. Your equipment should be accumulated slowly, cither with the help of an expert or as the result of your own study and experiments. But let's start at the beginning. We ll say that you are staying at a lake in Michigan or Wisconsin. You have been going there for several summers and you know the big fish by name. Over in the brush a few miles is a trout stream. Possibly you've studied it where it crosses the road and you can t see how those twelveinch riffles could conceal fish. Then, on some hot evening when the fish won t bite in your lake, look up one of the trout fishermen that whips the stream, get friendly with him and proposition him something as follows: Get Galloping Jitters “I’ve caught a lot of bass and pike in my life, but this heaving feathers at minnows is a mystery to me. There must be something to it to reduce otherwise intelligent men to a state approaching the galloping jitters. “So, mister, if I promise not to get in the way of your back cast or throw stones in the pools in front of you. may I trail along for an hour or so and watch?" Now on being fared with an opportunity like this the normal troutster will holler with joy and. grasping the victim firmly, will lead him away to the temptation that probably will result in his downfall. Trout anglers are like married men. they want to see others in the same trouble. Can't Describe Thrill If your guide is an expert and the fish are rising that evening, you will see the prettiest angling work of your life. I can't describe the thrill of the sport. You'll have to see it yourself. If you fall, as I predict you will, get hold of an old fly rod and the proper line and. leader and try it. You won't have to spend much money. Waders aren't necessary to reach the good spots. They will come later with the other refinements and expenses. Os course you won't catch a trout cn your first few tries but unless I'm mistaken you won't give up until you are hopelessly enmeshed in the lure of the game and reach the point where on a decision between shoes for the baby and a double tapered line, your offspring will just have to make the old pair do. REWARD OFFERED FOR CITY POOL VANDALS Park Superintendent Threatens ( losing After Outrage. A. C. Sallee, park superintendent, todav offered SSO for information Leading to the arrest and conviction of vandals who wrecked the chlorinating plant at the Douglas pool Friday night. If the pool is damaged again, it will be closed for the remainder of the summer. Mr. Sal’ee said. The chlorinating plant was put rut of operation when someone placed a huge tsone in it and turned on the water. The resulting overflow caused several hundred dollars damage. NEEDED NEW SHOES. BANDIT SUSPECT SAYS Alleged Holdup Man Identified by Motorists. “I needed anew pair of shoes." explained Russell Smith. 15 North Catherwood avenue, in a purported confession today, following his identification by two victims as the man who yesterday took $5.82 from them at me point of a gun after asking a lift in their automobile. The men who accused Smith and led police to arrest him a lew minutes after the robbery are Edward Foster. R. R. 1, Box 3, and Harold McDonald. Post road and Tenth street. They were robbed at Tenth street and Arlington avenue.

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LONDON, July 2.—The Cunard liner Mauretania leaves Southampton tomorrow on her last voyage to New York, the Herald says, after which she will cruise for four months before going to shipbreakers for scrapping. Built in 1907 the Maure-

— The Theatrical World Good Hot Weather Movies Are on View at Both Apollo, Circle _____ BY WALTER D. HICKMAN

BLONDS seem to be in fashion again as Fox has decided that the very blond Alice Faye deserves the right to be placed in such good comedy company as Mitchell and Durant. Harry Green and Lew Ayres. When you see "She Learned About Sailors." you will find Miss Faye is a promising blond who has a fairly

good singing voice. You met her first in that very poor movie, George White's "Scandals.” but this time she has more to do and she does it in a pleasing manner. Regardless of what idea the title of this movie may convey to you, I ran tell you that everybody manages to keep

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the comedy clean. Miss Faye is cast as a cabaret entertainer in China. Lew Ayres is a sailor with a weakness for blonds. Alice, a nice sort of a girl, makes Lew behave and so real love comes to both. When Lew goes to sea again he is informed by an officer that a fellow should not get married on a sailor's salary. So Lew goes noble and writes a letter telling the little girl not to wait. Lew gives the letter to Mitchpll and Durant to mail, but these two OFFICES OPENED HERE BY ELECTROLUX, INC. Indiana Branch to Handle Increased Business of Firm. Indiana branch of Electrolux. Inc., officially is opening new headquarters in the Illinois building today. Additional office space and larger salesrooms will take care of the company's increased business, state manager G. B. Crissman announced. Electrolux. Inc., manufactures a specially designed air purifier and cleaner used in homes, hotels, apartments, factories and other type buildings.

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comical sailors substitute a letter of their own which brings Alice to America before the fleet gets in. From then on, the comedy is centered upon the efforts of Mitchell and Durant to bring the couple together. In the end they are successful and all's well that ends well. Ayres has a happy time making love to Alice and seems to get a lot of enjoyment out of the role. Mitchell and Durant, those hardfalling and tumbling comedians, are good funmakers in this movie. Here is light, clean movie entertainment with a cast that is entertaining all of the time. Now at the Apollo. nun Oakie Pleases Once More AS hot weather entertainment, "Shoot the Works" fulfills its mission at the Circle this week. The story is far from being new, as it has been worked to death in every studio in the country, but it does give Jack Oakie a chance to do some emotional work of good character as well as handing out his favorite brand of hokum comedy. Oakie is cast as the barker of a dead whale show with a carnival. He has the big head and his romance with Dorothy Dell (Lily Racquel, a vaudeville singer), nearly goes on the rock because of his bad judgment. This picture proves that Dorothy Dell, if she had not come to her sudden death recently in an automobile accident, would have been one of the most interesting blonds in Hollywood. She possessed a splendid blues singing voice and exhibited a sense of showmanship w'hich w'ould have carried her far in the movies. A line in her last song near the end of the picture is rather appropriate. She asks, “What have I done to deserve such a fate?" Lew Cody, who also died recently, is in the cast of “Shoot the Works.’’ It is seldom that a movie cast has the services of two people who have died.

Alice Faye

MOTION PICTURES

gr THE WORKS" Comedy Cost. .. (lE—BEN BERNIE ELL —ARLINE JUDGE ARNS —SKIPWORTH DING US M BOLES £ Bromfield"s Story Kg T WINTERS” I

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tania was fastest of them all until 1929, when the Bremen took to the seas. In September, 1910, the Mauretania made the Liverpool-to-New York run in four days, twentyone hours. The Bremen crossed from Cherbourg to New York in four days, fourteen hours and returned in four days, sixteen hours.

Here is light summer entertainment that is clean. Now 7 at the Circle. tt u u LOEW'S PALACE is presenting Charlie Ruggles in “Murdear in the Private Car.” The Lyric is presenting the Baer-Carnera fight movies and “Affairs of a Gentlemen." These pictures have been reviewed in this department.

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NORTH SIDE r jn rr Illinois at 34th K I I /. Double Feature Geo. Raft • THE TRUMPET BLOW'S” “STAND UP AND CHEER” UPTOWN I 'n"if , r C o o J'if e lvMn Ginrer Rocers "20 MILLION SWEETHEARTS" r\v\ is 4 235] Station St I )K n A Iwl Johnnv Weissmuller u,lVL ' ivlT * Maureen O'Sullivan "TARZAN AND HIS MATE" ey. .P t 19th and ColhM Stratford “ nt. “SING AND LIKE IT." “DESIGN FOR_ LIVING" a ox*.e"i A Noble at Mass. MLIjIjA Double Feature Hlly\jVJi\ Katherine Hepburn “SPITFIRE" "DEATH TAKES A HOLIDAY" /•'i a TANARUS r Tdl/ Illinois at 30th IIAKRHiK Double Feature UmviVlVilY Norma Shearer "RIPTIDE" “DARK HAZARD" r p. loth A Northwestern Kr*. \ Double Feature IVt<A Rudv Vilee “GEORGE WHITE'S SCANDALS" _ “LOVE BIRDS" ______ pirfs f 4| n St. Clair '.t It Wayne SI 1,1.A IK At Jolson Jl ‘ v;Lo\n\ njrk Powf |, “WONDER BAR" T t In A'U'T' Talbot A 22nd 1 ALdU I 1 Double Feature A i tL/lA A Barbara Stanwyck “GAMBLING LADY" "COME ON MARINES" ZARING "VIVA VILLA ” EAST SIDE STRAND ‘Binr E c",\ s ?- Carole Lombard "WERE NOT DRESSING” • WHIRLPOOL” nillAT I Dearborn at 10th Kl\ OLI _ r "°- Aril.. Boris Karloff ‘HOISE OF ROTHSCHILD" ju yfVp 5507 E. Wash. St, lt\.\ll\VJ Zasu Pitts “SING AND LIKE IT" Paul Lukas' “GLAMOt R" PIIPII CAM 40311 E. Tenth St, EMERSON rr "20 MILLION SWEETHEARTS" “GANGWAY" TACOMA ”%VKK ft “WILD CARGO" “TOW EL TELLING ME"

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

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SAITO'S CABINET MAY QUIT, 1$ WORDINJAPAN Resignation Rumors Grow From Scandals About Taiwan Bank. By United Prrm TOKIO, July 2.—Viscount Saito's cabinet, harassed by scandal involving a subordinate official, will submit its resignation to Emperor Hirohito on Tuesday, it was learned reliably today. Members of the cabinet made the decision while meeting at the residence of Premier Saito. The crisis was precipitated when Vice-Minister of Finance Kuroda became involved in the Bank of Taiwan scandal. Whether the emperor would accept the resignation was not indicated. Mexico Names Leader By United Pres* MEXICO CITY, July 2—General Lazardo Cardenas. 39, protege of General Plutarco Elias Calles, was president-elect of Mexico today. He will succeed President Abelardo L. Rodriguez Dec. 1 for a six-year term. General Cardenas amassed the greatest total of ballots in Mexican history and the election was the most peaceful ever held, with only two deaths directly attributable to the voting. Two W’atches Are Stolen Two watches, valued at SSO, were stolen yesterday from the apartment of Mrs. Florence Blue, 424 East Twenty-first street.

EAST SIDE HAMILTON 2116 E TenthS ‘ TWO BIG FEATURES '.N . New Jer. at E. Wash Paramount do 7 u^ u F ;,us re “MEANEST GAL IN TOWN” "STRAIGHTAWAY” PARKER “WONDER BAR" _ SOUTH SIDE FOUNTAIN SQUARE” Dilrk Powell “20 MILLION SWEETHEARTS" “NASTY MAN" SANDERS Pt 'B!£P' “ADVICE TO THE LOVELORN” “MEN IN WHITE" ORIENTAL KSf “MYSTERY OF MR. X” “ALL MEN ARE ENEMIES" A Vll ON Prosp’t. at Chur'man It T TkL/V/il Double Feature "LINE UP” “WHEELS OF DESTINY” C- l J 22ii3 Shelby iTflrtlP <1 Double Feature UaillUU Frank Buck s "WILD CARGO" “LOOKING FOR TROUBLE" r lx 1129 S. Meridian KOOSPVP t Double Feature IVUU3C l Cll Edna Mae Oliver “THE POOR RICH “RAINBOW OVER BROADWAY WEST SIDE nv * ICV 2540 W. Michigan I JAIN Y Double Feature 1 Frank Buck's “WILD CARGO" “BIG SHAKEDOWN" n pi 1 1A VT W. Wash, at Belmont BtLMUN 1 Double Feature wi 1 X j oe F Brown “A VERY HONORABLE GUY" "HOUSE OF ROTHSCHILD" Cirierr <ntt W. tenth St. MAIL Double Feature OATAAI-e Helen X welvetres “ALL MEN ARE ENEMIES" ".NO MORE WOMEN ’

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Historical 1934 JULY 19341 SLN’MONTUE WED THU; FMJSAT I ■ ■ I m rmrrriTST 6 1 1 July igT9lloTllll2jl3 14 15 16117 18 19 20 21* 221Mr24125 2g27!28 • 29 1 30i31‘ T T 1 July 1 July 1? Dominion Day (Canada). Birthday of General BedFirst Air Mail—Chicago to ford Forrest (in Tenn.), . New York, 1919. 1821. Julv 3 Ju’y 11 Idaho admitted to Union, Bastile Day, first celebrated 1890> in U. S. in 1914. July 4 J u^v Independence Day (1776). St. Swithin s Day. Calvin Coolidge (30th President) born, 1872. Nathaniel Hawthorne, au- July 16 thor, born 1804. District of Columbia, estabFirst road test of the auto- lished, 1790. mobile at Kokomo, Ind., 1894. July 24 Pioneer Day (in Utah). 1 July 7 Inauguration of Rail-Air Passenger Service between July 2o New York and California, Occupation Day (in Porto 1929. Rico). July 11 July 26 John Quincy Adams (6th Postal System, established, President) born, 1767. 1775. Wyoming admitted to the New York admitted to the Union, 1890. Union, 1788. And for Low Cost Want Ad Results Any Day . . . Call Rl ley 5551

JULY 2, 1934