Indianapolis Times, Volume 36, Number 94, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 August 1924 — Page 3
WEDNESDAY, ATJD. 27, 1924
MILLER TO SEEK MANDATE UNLESS SALARIES PAID Fire Marshal Says Law Is on His Side in Squabble With Bracken, Asa result of State Auditor Robert Bracken’s refusal to honor August salary claims from the State Fire Marshal's office because appropriated funds are insufficient, Miller will be forced to institute mandamus proceedings if his official staff is to get more than half its salary for August and any money at all for September. §60,000 Nearly Cone The Fire Marshal's Fund contains $55,409.53, but Bracken refuses to allow Miller to spend any of it. He declares 160.000 was appropriated for Miller's office and that there is only $1,453 of the appropriation left Miller's August salary claims are $2,793. Miller has always contended all of the fund was available for his use, declaring that since the legislature established a specific fund for his ofTlce, it amounts to the same thing as an approriation. Fees from insurance companies and dry cleaning establishments go ■ to make up the fund. Although the auditor puts both kinds of fees into the State fire marshal's fund, the statutes provide the insurance fees shall go into this fund and the dry cleaning fees go into a “special fund” for the maintenance of the fire marshal’s office. Miller asked that the claims be paid from this fund. Bracken denied the existence of such a fund, t Lesh Supports Him Miller has opinions from Attorney Generals Eli Stansbury in 1919 and U. S. Lesh last March that the whole of both funds is available for his use and that legislative appropriation is superfluous. If Bracken asks for an opinion from Lesh he will probably get the same answer. Unless he abides by the opinion of Lesh, Milleprobably will institute mandamu proceedings to collect the salaries so. his staff. Wife’s Way "A fool and his money are soon parted.” “Oh, Robert, how much are you going to give me?”—Boston Transcript.
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MY OWN STORY . ‘BREAD AND B UTTER ’ THREA T USED ON MEN BY RAILROADS By ROBERT M. LA FOLLETTE 1
‘•MY OWN STODY” is an exclusive : newspaper version of one of the , reat autobiographies of modem times; La toilette's own story of adventures in politics as written by himself in 1913. together I with an authorized narrative of his exi perienees in the > ears since then. SYNOPSIS OF PREVIOUS INSTALLMENTS After two defeats as Progressive candidate for Governor of Wisconsin. La Follette is overwhelmingly nominated and : elected in 1900. The political bosses buck ! the administration program at every turn. 1 They are particularly bitter in their attacks on La Follette and his proposals for raailroad taxation and regulation. The Legislature passes the bill for railroad regulation taxation, however, although the railroad regulattion measure is unsuccessi ful. The Progressives' direct primary bill easily passes the Assembly, and after a hard battle, finally wins out in the Senate, too. This happened in the primary election for United States Senator in Wisconsin in 1908. There were two Progressives in the field against Stephenson, both very strong men— McGovern, afterward Governor, and State Senator Hatton—and they split the Progressive vote between them, thus slipped in between and received a plurality of the votes. It was the omission of the secondchoice provision, with the opening it gave for a man like Stephenson to spend a large sum of money to secure his nomination (his recorded expenditure was $107,000), that has furnished the chief cause of complaint against the Wisconsin primary sysI tern. People do not stop to think that | under the old caucus and convention \ system the amounts spent in an eleci tion were often many times as great ; and no account was made of them. A second-choice provision, such sis we now have in Wisconsin, ought to be the Jaw of every State which has a direct primary. We needed one thing more in connection with the primary law, and that was a stringent corrupt prac- : tices act to prevent the corrupt use of money in primaries and in elec- ; tions. We tried hard to get such a law !in 1903. We failed at that time, but Wisconsin now has an admirable measure which will make it impossible for any candidate to spend money as Mr. Sfephenson did in 11908. Lobbyist* Ousted Okie other measure, of great importance also came up strongly in the session of 1903. It grew directly out of our experience with the I lobby, and was designed to abolish | these corrupt influences which had ; for decades controlled legislation in Wisconsin. We began fighting for such legislation as early as 1897, and I urged it in messages to three different Legislatures, . Wit It was not until 1905
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THE LA FOLLETTE FAMILY IN 1912. SEATED. LEFT TO RIGHT—MRS. LA FOLLETTE. THEIR DAUGHTER, MARY, AND SENATOR LA FOLLETTE. STANDING, LEFT TO RIQHT—THE LA FOLETTE BOYS, PHILIP AND ROBERT, JR.
that our anti-lobby law was finally enacted. The Wisconsin statute requires ail lobbyists or representatives, employed and paid for their services, to register themselves in the office of the secretary of State, specifying the character of their employment, and by whom employed. The statute prohibits such lobby agents or counsel from having any private communication with members of the Legislature upon any subject of legislation. The lobby is given the widest opportunity to present publicity to legislative committees or to individual members of the Legislature written or printed arguments in favor of or opposed to any proposed legislation; provided, however, that copies of such written or printed arguments shall be first filed in the office of the secretary of State. This law rests upon the principle that legislation is public business and that the public has a right to
53 S. Illinois St. 27 S. Illinois St. 103 W. Wash. St. 156 N. Illinois St.
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
! know what arguments are presented to members of the Legislature to induce them to enact or defeat legislation, so that any citizen or body of .citizens shall have opportunity, if they desire, to answer sucii arguments. Since I came to the Senate I have steadfastly maintained the same position. Again and again I have protested against secret hearings before congressional committees upon the public business. When the tariff bill on wool aid woolens was in conference between the two houses in 1911, I v determined as a member of the. conference that its sessions shnui . be held, if possible, with fipen doors. I waited upon Senator Bailey, a member of the committee, and told him I proposed to announce that I should freely discuss on the floor of the Senate any action taken by the committee, and that if support could he had I should move to make the sessions off-the committee open and public. I was assured by Senator Bailey that he was heartily in favor of that course. When the committee met, Senator Bailey moved that the sessions be held with open doors. Objection was made, hut finally, on a roll call, the motion carried, the doors were opened, and the representatives of the newspapers were admitted. For the first time in the history of Congress a conference committee transacted its important business under the eye of the public. In a great body like the Congress of the United States nearly all legislation is controlled by committees. The sanction of a committee goes a long way. Committees Control The life of a Congressman, a Senator, is a busy one; he is worked eariy and late, and in some measure he must depend for the details of legislation upon the committees-ap-pointed for the purpose of perfecting the legislation. We spend a vast sum of money to print a Congressional Record in order that the public may be made acquainted with the conduct of their business, and then we transact the most important of the business behind the locked doors of a commitlee room. The public believes that the Congressional Record tells the complete story, when it is in reality only the final chapter. Our Progressive cause in Wisconsin has always been supported by what is more technically called the labor vote. Many years ago, in Wisconsin, it was customary, shortly before election, for the bosses to distribute four or five thousand dollars among certain of the old-time labor leaders, who were expected thereafter to de liver the labor vote to the Republican ticket. I have heard it said many times back in those years “Oh, never mind about the larfior vote; Payne will take care of that.” When we began our fight on the bosses they resorted to their usual methods of influencing the labor leaders. The railroads and the big shippers also tried actively to vote their employes against me, but after we had begun to be successful, we got more and more of their support. This -was noticeable in the campaign of 1902. In our great crucial campaign of 1904, this effort to influence the labor vote reached its height. It was the final struggle. Congressman Babcock personally called upon large employers of labor and urged them either to prevent their men going to the caucuses to vote for La Follette or else to devise means of controlling the caucuses. In a l.umber of cases railroad men were notified to be at the roundhouse or shop at a given time when the superintendent would arrive in a special car to address them. Prepared Ballots The talk was something like this; “It is to our intrest and therefore to yours that this man La Follette be defeated for nomination. Your bread and butter depends on your standing by the railroads at the caucuses.” And when the caucuses were held, division superintendents and other officials often stood at the entrance to the voting places and handed specially prepared ballots to the railroad employes as they came up to vote. But in spite of all these efforts I always felt, in fact knew, that I had the sympathy of these employes. Several times In the campaign which followed this desperate attempt to control the caucuses have I had a conductor, as he was taking my ticket, lean down and whisper: “It’s all right. Governor; they had
us where we were obliged to take ox-ders in the caucus, but they can’t watch us in the election. The Australian ballot will give us a chance.” In somo cases where the labor vote was very heavy the employers allowed La Follette delegates to be elected and afterward gave them the alternative of losing their jobs or violating their political faith. In Eau Claire County we met with an example. We had. there a very strong supporter who catne to us and told us exactly his situation. He said he had been threatened with loss of his job if be voted for hie in the convention, and while it would j be a'great hardship for him to lose i liis position, he could not reconcile himself to obey their orders. We found that we could spare his I vote and save his job, so he voted against vs, with our full underI standing of the reason. (Copyright, 1924, NEA Service, Inc) (Continued in Our Next Issue) FRENCH PAPERS ATTACK STAND OF ' PREMIER HERRIDT / Senate Votes Acceptance of London Agreement on _ Reparations, By JOHN DEGANDT United Pres* Correspondent PARIS. Aug. 27.—“ France can act alone no longer,” the Echo De Paris said today, summarizing conservative opinion following the Senate’s acceptance of the London agreement | for settlement of the reparations question. All the opposition newspapers carried bitter editorials on what they j consider surrender of the strong foreign policy of the Poincare government. The Echo De Paris saw grave danger in Premier Herriot’s stand. “Whom are we following now?” ; the newspaper demanded. “Leon 1 Blum, an arch-socialist, has stretched his hand to Prime Minister Mac Don, aid.” Sorry Affair i The newspaper described as a “sorry affair" last night's senate debate, in which Poincare and Herriot I fought out their opposing views and which ended in a complete victory for the premier. “Poincare spent all his time justifying his past policy, regretting the policy of the Herriot government :fnd expressing fears for the future." the newspaper declared. Item said that former Minister Cheron and other supposed supporters of Poincare abandoned him when the vote on Herriot’s action came. “It is not alone in London that Frenchmen are following a policy of surrender," the Journal complained. “In general, however, the public seemed well satisfied that parliamentary approval of the I-ondon agreement has been completed, believing that the French position will be stronger. France is the first nation to show its full support of the program, which Europe hopes will result in a general settlement of the tangled political and economic situation since the signing of the treaty of Versailles. Vote Is 204 to 40 The final vote in the Senate was overwhelmingly in favor of the premier’s action. 204 declaring their approval and only 40 opposing. The Poincare forty supporters generally did not vote as the former premier was placed in the position that to support the pact of London would have been to run counter to his own Ruhr policy, because of the provision for evacuation of occupied territory: to vote against it would be to oppose the Dawes plan on which the London agreement is based and responsibility for which Poincare has always claimed. POLICE HOLD YOUTH John R. Savage Charged with Stealing New Roadster. John R. Savage, 21, of? 24 Fletcher Ave., is held today on a charge of stealing a new' roadster from the C. H. Wallerich Company, June 28. Savage is alleged to heve tried to have tried to dispose of the car at Greenville and left the car there when suspicioned. Detectives Landers and Rugenstein arrested Savage Tuesday afternoon at Tenth St. and Capitol Ave. Oscar Williams, colored, 1545 Columbia Ave., charged with robbery of D. L. White Drug Store, 1315 E. Sixteenth St. is held. Frank N. Nogle, 922 E. Tenth St., an employee of the Fletcher American Bank has confessed stealing a package containing SBIO from the emergency safe, July 21, Detectives said.
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Here’s a Song of Three Fishers Who Went Sailing Because Men Must Work and Women Must Weep
By WALTER D. HICKMAN ELODY and tragedy haunt the ocean. Some men and t__l women have captured the haunting ti-agio spell of the old devil ocean and have placed it in fiction. Sometimes, not often, a composer captures what the waves are saying.' This is true of Charles Kingsley, who not only understands the ocean, but knows what it says. Kingsley is noted for his famous sea-coast song, “Three Fishers Went Sailing.” Arpong the new Victor records is v ttiis tragic thing of Kingsley. It is sung by Kathryn /Meisle, who has a rich contralto voice. The singer goes in for the tragic moods of this weird voyage of three fishermen who leave their wives on the shore. These men know why they go to sea, beause “men must work and women must weep.” They know they have “little to earn and many to keep." And they never come back. That’s t-he tragedy w r hich Kathryn Meisle sings about in "Three Fishers.” This record belongs to the better class of things. So beautifully tragic does the song become that you feel as if the ocean is reaching out To grab you. But “men must work and women must weep.” On the other side Meisle sings "Afterwards,” another thoughtful piece which has been enriched by the gorgeous voice of this artist. classical Desert Only a few people have an opportunity to hear real grand opera as.the two leading seasons are found In Chicago and New York. Most of us hear our grand opera stars on the phonographs or at an occasional concert. Every time that Titta Russo, baritone, releases a now Victor record I become excited. Am proifd of one thing, I have more classical records than jazz. Am not a high brow, but for years I have been getting- more and more understanding out of the better music. Jazz does not drive me frantic. Far from it, but it is a pleasure to hear Russo sing “Lolita—Serenade” anil “Perjura” (Fickle Maiden). Here nre two love songs covered with Italian and Spanish sauce. Get my idea? "Lolita” is in Italian, while “Perjura” is a Spanish affair. Russo has a powerful voice, rich and Nfull. Here is a record that adds real value to any library of records. You can purchase this record safely because it delivers. Trotting About New record releases are flooded with jazzy fox trots. I ran across some r-ew ones on Gennetts. The Vagabonds are represented with
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Final Week ' y 1 Tj it RUDOLPH VALENTINO Rudy is* in his final week of “Monsieur Beaucaire,” Paramount movie of Booth Tarkington’s' splendid romance of old France, at the Ohio. The engagement closes on Saturday night, as Gloria Swanson is booked in “Manhandled” next week. "Louise” and “Knock at the Door.” Here are two jazzy, fox-tx-ots of the regulation pattern. They are made for dancing purposes alone. Bailey's Lucky Seven may he heax-d on anew Gennnett record. They day “Maytime” and “Oriental Love Dreams.” I like the "Oriiental” number the best of these two Gennett records. Have been asked to list this year's output of the Oriole Orchestra on Brunswick records. Here is the Oriole-Brunswiek list: “A Smile Will Go A Long, Long Way” and “Sobbin' Blues.” “Chansonette and Bonnie.” "Eccentric Rag"—Fox Trot. “Foolish Child” and “Carolita.” “In a Cozy Tea Room" and 'That’s Everything.”—Fox Trot. “I Need Some Pettin’ ’’ and “Little Old Clock on the Mantel.” “Maybe”—Fox Trot. “Step Henrietta” and “You'll Nex r er Get to Heaven with Those Eyes.” “That's My Baby" and “Every
Night I Cry Myself to Sleep Over You.” “There’s Yes, Yes In Your Eyes,” and “That Lullaby Strain, u - Fox Trots. “Where the Lazy Daisies Grow,” and “Don’t Mind the Rain.' J -- Fox Trots. Herman Ostheimer plays "Prelude —C Sharp Minor” (Rachmaninoff) and “To Spring,” on anew Green Label Gen nett record. • • Attractions on view today In theaters Include: “Step-Along,” at the Broadway: "Fast Steppers,” at the Capitol; “Dance Revelations,” a-t the Lyric: Elizabeth Brice at the Palace: "Secrets,” at the Circle; “Monsieur Beaucaire,” at the Ohio; “A Woman Who Sinned," ad the Apollo; “On Time,” at the Isis and ’Flaming Passions,” at Mister Smith’s. OUTING TO CLOSE ELKS CONVENTION Shelbyville Man Elected State President, By Times Special TERRE HAUTE, Ind., Aug. 27. An all-day outing today marked tha close of the two-day session of Indiana Elks, in State convention here. Business session was held oh Tuesday, at which time Valparaiso was chosen for the 1925 convention, and Garner R. Fleming of Shelhyville was elected presidentOther officers were William E. Ht-ndilck, Terre Haute, Dr. F. J. McMichacl, Gary, and John C. Hampton, Muncie, vice president; Don Allman, Noblesville, secretary; George S. Green, Mt. Vernon, treasuere; Julius Albe, Valparaiso, and Joseph Getz, Ft. Wayne, trustees. Appointments were made by President Fleming as follows: Charles P. Nuppnau, Gary', chaplain; Charles Breedemus, South Bend, sergeant-at-arms, and Roy White of Evansville, tyler. District presidents were chosen as follows: J. S. Bartholomew, Valparaiso; S. P. Carney, Llgonier; Richard Carter of Lafayette; R. M. Mowitz of Garrett; Frank Finey, Martinsville; J. A. Whalen, Crawfordsville; Rajph Gustine of Washington; Michael Thornton of New Albany; John Michael of Connersville; W. W. Bray of Noblesville, and H. L. Bayjes of Vincennes.
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