Indianapolis Times, Volume 39, Number 32, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 June 1927 — Page 8
PAGE 8
AUBURN LAWYER BACKS GILLIOM IN LIQUOR FIGHT Commends Attorney General for Courage to Make Utterances. Many men have been so scared en the liquor question that they were afraid even to talk about it to their wives, Dan M. Link, Auburn, £nd., attorney, declared in a letter to Attorney General Arthur L. Gilliom. Link’s letter commended Gilliom for his recent letter to Governor Jackson revealing that Jackson used whisky as medicine to save the life of his wife and Gilliom to save the lives of his sons and asking medicinal use of liquor be made legal in Indiana. His letter: “I have been reading wi£h a great deal of satisfaction your recent public writings and utterances on the liquor question. It requires courage to do such things, but I would like to remind you that there is no quality in human nature that mankind admires so much as courage. A brave man is admired when he is rash or even wrong. “I am a dry and I know you are p dry, and my feeling toward Shumaker is not so much of anger as of disgust. “I have been doing considerable traveling in the last few months, and it has not been pleasant for a prideful and loyal Hoosier to hear people in hotels and on the trains poke fun at Indiana. “For a number of years now wej have been blackmailed and hamstrung by the Klu Klux Klan and the Anti-Saloon League until few men in public life have had nerve enough to say what everybody thinks. “I agree that this is not a matter of liquor, or no liquor, as you are just as good a temperance man as Shumaker. It is a rotten condition of politics and a striking illustration j of the intimidating power of a small j number of persons who are well or-1 ganized and well financed. “I hope you will continue to say i publicly what you think about these questions, which are of public interest. It will encourage others to talk out loud who for years have been so scared that they were even afraid to talk to their wives about A healthy apple tree has an average of thirty to fifty leaves to each apple.
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Kills Octopus
Armed with a pike pole, A. E. Hook, a diver at Port Townsend, Wash., battled an octopus on the sea’s floor for an hour—and won the fight. The diver was repairing a fish net when he sighted the devilfish, which was carrying off one of five men who sank with a tugboat a days before.
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TEAPOT DOME WITNESS WILL FSGHURREST State Department to Meet Bitter Opposition in Returning Blackmer. WASHINGTON, June 17.—The U. S. government’s attempt to commandeer the service of Henry Blackmer, missing Teapot Dome witness now residing in France, will be the basis of a legfel controversy involving Congress, the state and justice departments and possibly the French government. Blackmer recently was served with a summons in France to appear as a witness at the Teapot Dome trial, now scheduled for fall, or to suffer a fine of as much as SIOO,OOO. At the same time the State Department revoked his passport, making his residence in France illegal and making it impossible for him to move to any other country. This action, it was learned today, will be attacked as an unwarranted
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
and unprecedented invasion of the rights of a U. S. citizen, charged with no crime, as an overstepping of justince and State Department authority, and possibly as an embarrassment to the French government. The State Department, in taking up Blackmer’s passport, according to State Undersecretary Robert Olds, acted at the request of the Justice Department because Blackmer was evading a summons of a U. S. court to testify in a case in which the government is interested. Attorneys representing Blackmer’s interests in this country contend that the State Department in following this request of the justice department, overstepped legal bounds, because the justice department has no authority to make such a request since it has no control over U. S. citizens in other countries who are not charged with crimes. Nothing Illegal Done Blackmer, they insist, has done nothing illegal in prolonging his stay in France at the expense of testimony at the Fall-Sinclair conspiracy trial. An attack on the law providing for a fine of SIOO,OOO for failure to appear after being summoned will be made at the next Congressional session, and repeal will be sought on the ground that it oversteps the authority of the U. S. In the meantime, Blackmer’s friends argue that the withdrawal
of his passport puts the French government in an embarrassing position because it makes his residence there illegal. PLAN PIONEER PAGEANT Peru Legion Post Will Depict Historic Events to 1834. Bu Times Special PERU, Ind., June 17.—A pageant picturing historic events of the Indiana and pioneer life of Miami County from primitive times to the founding of Peru in 1834 will be given under auspices of the Glen Owens Post American Legion as a feature of the opening of the municipal park here Aug. 11-14. Ten thousand dollars will be spent for costumes and settings for the pageant, of which one of the principal features will be scenes in the life of Frances Slocum, captured by the Indians In Pennsylvania when a girl, and adopted into the Delaware tribe. Frances Slocum is buried eight miles southeast of Peru.
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INDIANA FAVORS ITS ‘THANK YOU’ Illinois Grumbles at Phone Operator’s Change. While Illinois public service commissioners are debating whether to permit continuation of “thank you” in response to phone numbers given to central operators, not a word of complaint has come to the Indiana commission. The substitution of “thank you” for repeating the number has been in qffect on Indiana Bell lines throughout the State for the last year. Recently this service was started in Indianapolis. Most letters received have been of high praise, phone officials report. “To hear a sweet ‘thank you’ often changes the subscribers viewpoint,”
said Indiana Manager F. A. Montrose. “A man told me that he was calling someone to bawl her out and
Three-Day Sale of Summer Needs DOWNSTAIRS AYRES POOD MERff-AMIXSE AVRtZ SERVICE I.OW PHlfkll Sale of 240 New “Mary Lu” Frocks T/i* Here are beautiful new “Mary / r *W'V / Lu’4. frocks, equally appropri- // asa/ a * e or s^ aU( I h° ra c wear. They are splendidly tailored garments in pretty voiles and batiste. The skirts are full and gathered at the waist; trimmed with attractive collar f I and tie combination, etc. They I sy' 1 / assortment of colors including / * blue, rose, green, lavender, navy, etc. These frocks will IflmPr launder splendidly. Sizes 1G See Other Ayres 1 Downstairs Store Ads on Panes 2, 5, 11, 15, 19
JUNE 17,1927
when the operator said ‘thank you’ after he gave the number his anger subsided.”
