Fiery Cross, Volume 3, Number 10, Indianapolis, Marion County, 4 January 1924 — Page 5
YOUNGSTCWNKLAN TO HEIP LOCATE MAN ,Will Advance Funds to Aid in Search for Man in Connection With Conrad Murder
YOUNGSTOWN. O., Dec. 31. The Ku Klux Klan of Mahoning county has offered its services tit locating Vasil Bogdan, who Is accused of par(ideation in the murder ot the late prohibition officer, Dr. S. E. Conrad; and furthermore, offers to pay nil expenses connected -with the employment of a detective to be sent in "search of him . by the city of Yov.ngstcrwn. Bogdan was released following his arrest for -cutting to kill, on $2,000 bail. Chief of Police McNlchols of Youngstewn states that he has only the word of Attorney O. E. Diner, who represents Bogdan, that the man Is in the city of Indianapolis or somewhere in the state of Indiana. City Will Probably Accept Funds Since representatives of the K. K. K. have requested that the city allow them to finance the search for
Bogdan, McXicbols is said to have
stated, "I'll take money from any
source, if it will aid in bringing Bogdan to Justice." McNlchoU also fctatod, it is reported, that if funds
will be available to send men to In
diana to search for the murderer of Dr. Conrad that they will be without
a clew to work upon.
The grocery owned by Bogdan, on
Poland avenue, Youngstown, is closed, and there is no evidence that
the business is being conducted.
Judge Thomas Jenkins made the
statement that if money is provided
to send detectives out of the city to
mttke a search for Bogdan, he will
issuo a capias for his arrest. In last night's edition of a Youngs
town paper an editorial on the above subject states that the report of the
Youngstown police saying they had notified the police of Indianapolis to arrest Bogdan, has been denied by the Indianapolis police headquarters.
They add that by no wire message, word of mouth or in any manner have they received any such instructions.
HEARD:
EETING
KLAN SPEAKER
AT WAUSEON K
WAUSEON, Q.. Dec. 29. That all
fair-minded opposition to the Klan
movement in the United States will
be swept aside when the principles
at the organization are thoroughly understood, was the assertion ot a
Klan speaker who addressed a large
crowd last Tuesday night at the
courthouse in this city. He declared
much ot the antagonism now exist
ing toward the Klan. is due to false
propaganda, circulated by aliens who owe their allegiance to other rulers
and would-be rulers. He explained
ihat the organization does not deny
any man or woman the right ,to wor
ship aB they choose, but he did emphasize the importance of separating church and state, insofar as it affects the welfare of America and American Institutions. Several hundred persons attended the meeting and the speaker was applauded thunderously as he declared that the worst enemies of the Klan are those who do not want to understand its principles. It is understood that Klansmen of Wauseon and Fulton county are preparing for a big klonklave within the next few weeks at which hundreds of candidates will be naturalized.
GOSSIP SCORED BY
MINISTER IN SERMON
Poisoned Tongue More Deadly
Than Gas, Rev. C. J. McCombs Asserts
1,500 KLANSMEN AT CONRAD FUNERAL
SALEM. Ohio, Dec. 29. The largest funeral in the history of this city was that of Dr. S. E. Conrad, prohibition enforcement director, who was fatally stabbed while leading a liquor raid several weeks ago. Hundreds of Klansmen attended the rites and among the floral offerings were several large fiery crosses, presented by various organizations. A special interurban car
from Liverpool carried members of the Klan of that city apcLbjindreds
cf automobiles were in the procession to the ceretery. Fifteen hundred Klansmen in full
regalia took part in the services at the grave In Grandview Burial Park
and the ceremony was witnessed by
thousands of persons.
ALIENS ARE EIEN ACE,
SAYS U.S. SECRETARY
POLICE PROTEST LEVY " FOR CAMPAIGN FUNDS
LIQUOR FOUND UNDER HEN; OWNER IN JAIL
COLUMBUS, O., Dec. 31. The poi
son-tinned tongue was characterized
as more deadly than poison gas by
the Rev. C. Jeffares McCombs, pas
tor of the Broad Street Metnocusi
Rnisc.onal church in a sermon on
The Sins of the Tongue.
More Deople have been slain by
venomous slander, he asserted, than
by the deadliest gases used m tn
world war. "The slanderous scandalmonger," he said, "makes enemies
out of friends, drives husbands and
wives to the divorce court, partner
shiDS- to dissolution, business into
bankruptcy and poisons the well of
friendship.
"I am afraid of the black tongue, for I do not. possess much except my character and my reputation. He who robs me of my good name robs me of that which does not enrich him and leaves me poor indeed," he continued. "The scientific slander, with its drooped lip, arched eyebrow, shrugged shoulder", . significant look and adder's poison under his lips can release a poisonous virus which no legal analysis can produce in court as basis for a libel, yet will do its deadly work in undermining stable characters. The slanderer whose specialty is the sin of the tongue should be subjected to the cleaning power of the life and death of Jesus
Christ. If he fails to eesponct to tins
treatment, he should be consigned to an isolation camp, where he may companion with the stinging serpents and poison himself with his own sting."
COLUMBUS, O.. Dee. 31. A hen hatched trouble for Joh!iH. Smiley, owner of a poolroom here, who is in Jail. When dry enforcement officers entered Smiley's place their attention was attracted by a hen that shifted uneasily on her nest in a bock room. One of the investigators
thought hecflught a glimpse of a bottle neck as the hen changed her position and he investigated. A search of the nest revealed not only one, but four other half-pint flasks of evidence and aditional booze was discovered, the officers reported, in feather dusters and tar barrels. Smiley is said to have paid more than $2,000 in fines for violations of the Eighteenth Amendment.
JUDGE GARY URGES ALL-YEAR CHRISTMAS
CHICAGO, Dec. 28. What the world needs is a little more of Christmas good fellowship spread through 3fi5 days of the year instead of Just through the holiday season a little less thought of materialistic gains and a little more of benefiting humanity, says Judge Elbert H. Gary, head of the United States Steel Corporation, who is visiting relatives here. And. he adds, that Is exactly what the world is beginning to get though not in the quantities he would prescribe.
( 0$ 1
99
J. D. GOLntOEHItV, D. C.
Five years In practice
"How Flu Recurs
Hralth Tnlk So. 3T By J. D. Goldsberry. V. C. "How Flu Recurs" is the title of an article In a recent issue of the Literary Digest, in which the point is made that influenza comes back -every thirty-three weeks after an epidemic. The supposition Is that at any such Period there may be another epidemic. The last period passed in the summer but only London suffered. The next pertod, due in the late winter and early spring, may bring a recurrence here. It is well to remember that the record in the influenza epidemic showed but onjt death in every 886 patients given chiropractic spinal adjustments. Influenza is a lung airf v. . , r..iHijir v ii f fc Rtiffprer tn
get oxygen from the air is to greatly reduced, that every energy of
trie xtnay is neeaea ior me ns m. k' .. 4 - just where It Is needed, and that Is the reason its patienta recover. There is no substitute for chiropractic spinal adjustments. IVKN IP TO DIK "My boy was having hemorrhages every three minutes. The case had become worse and was now pneumonia and physicians said the entire left lung had filled up. In the emergency I went for the chiropractor In mv car and brought him back. Before the first chiropractic spinal adjustment wag given, the hemorrhages were coming every minute, and the congestion had Started In the right lung. But the hemorrhages were stopped almost immediately. The breathing became easier. As the days went by the boy became stronger and he wa; snonable to take a ride with me. He fully recovered and today Is Kturdy"und strong with no hint of lung weakness . A. P. glingerland, Chiropractic Research Bureau, Statement No. 1343C.
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(Continued from Page I)
the individuals who come- to ma.k8 up
this great group. For the past forty years oar laws have made every effort to bar from this con try those who would lower oar mental, moral and physical standards. The first
law enacted was to keen out the
Chinese, the 'Chinese exclusion law,' Next we, barred the insane, and to
day the law denies admission to
every idiot. Imbecile, feeble-minded.
psychopathic inferior, insane, inebriate, criminal, anarchist. Immoral,
and provisionally bars those phys
ically defective and those likely to
become public charges.
Despite every effort, we find an
extraordinary proportion of these
classes in onr alien population. A
recent survey was made by a com
mittee of the House of our jails, almshouses, insane asylums and other public Institutions. The scientist who made the survey covered in
stitutions caring for imbeciles, feeble-minded, insane, inebriates, diseased, blind, daft, the crippled and the dependents, and found that while the foreign born make up about 14 per cent ot our population, they furnish 30 per cent of the population of those institutions : that 44.9 jer cent
of the inmates of those institutions were either foreign born or of foreign stock.
Mental Diseases Increase "The rate of mental diseases has increased in the past forty years from 81.6 per cent per 10000 to 220.1 per cent per 190,000 in the general population. The rate of mental
diseases among foreign-born persons and native born of foreign or mixed parentage is higher than the rate of such disorders of native born of native parents. "The corrected rate covering a period of thirty-two years of persons admitted to public and private insti
tutions caring for mental patients in th state of New York shows that for each 10 admissions in these institutions 44.8 per cent were foreign born. Of course, not all of this groupof mental defectives are admitted at our ports. A great number gain surreptitious entry smuggled .across our border in various other ways. "For over a century the psychology of the United States has been to think of the other fellow first and the United States last, if at all. We
have been looking at our immigration problem through the wrong end of the telescope. We have stood with open arms, we have been the
long-distance hand-shakers of all the world; we have called ourselves bighearted! generous! and said to the
world. 'Come One, Come AH,' no
matter how black your- past, regard
less of your ideas of life and government, regardless of your reason for leaving your home, yon are to us as pure as the driven snow Come, we
have vast undeveloped resources,
vast plains of untitled land. Come,
and we will put you through our huee national melting pot and you will come forth a "wonder people beautiful sentiments, I grant you, but what has been the result? How has it worked out? At Merey of Aliens "One thing we know, the aliens have taken us at our word. While the stream flowed in we spent our time accumulating wealth, establish
ing huge business enterprises, creating world corporations, developing our resources without a glance Into the melting pot, withont examining its contents or its product. We left this job enirely for 'George' to de.
For years the public was at the mercy of alien propagandists and 'sob' writera. When I think of all
the sentimental slush written on this
subject in the last three decades, and I some of it by our own unthinking writers, I do not wonder that we are I known to the other nations of the world as 'the great easy marks.' It is all right to be idealists, to be
charitable, to feed the starving, 'to help the poor and needy that cluster
round about,' but should this be our only aim"? Have we been lulled to sleep by flattery and fulsome
praise to the neglect ot our duty to our country? "Study the rise and fall of nations assign whatever theory you like for their fall, but you will find there has been one cause underlying all alien invasion, not; by enemy aliens but friendly alien's; aliens coming from a lower civilization to crowd into a better one; aliens coming to be servants, bootblacks, peddlers, etc., or even soldiers, but who gradually outnumber the original' stock who created the civilisation. Some-
times it requires centuries, but
eventually It means but' one thing,
the wiping out of the higher and re
placing the old with the new.
"What should be done? A -very
natural question. I will name one
plan which is worthy of your serious
consideration restrictive and selective immigration and the enrollment of all aliens, those who have arrived
in the past as well as future arrivals, Should Enroll All Aliens
"We should have a law registering
or enrolling all aliens, until Ifeey be
come naturalized citizens aad, In or
der that we may help them to become
Americanized. At fisst blush you
would think everybody, citizen and alien alike, woald be for this kind of
a law, but not so. Many racial
groups in this country oppose it and.
there are others. We can not hope
to have all see ror problems alike,
Honest men differ In the solution of
this problem."
Despite the logical necessity for
the enrollment or aliens many prom
inent citizens have complained that such a practice would be un-American and in effect espionage, Mr.
white declared.
"Every taxpayer is enrolled by .the
government in states, cities. coun
ties and towns in the United States,
Millions of our people are enrolled
by the umted State as income 'tax
payers. Do you toaovr of any evil
that lias come to ok of these unless
he unlawfully tried to escape paying
(Continued from Page 1) Armitage whose long, pa I tee record is known by all of them. . Fire Cbiet (FBrtea's Actio Many of the most efficient poBet in the city, those not hooked up with the Mulitn-Glenn-KIkhoft faction of the department, have declared, It Is rumored, that they will quit the department before' they will contribute to a slush fund to try to elect Shank governor of the. state. Whether this same feeling exists in the fire department is not known,
although it is only supposed that Fire Chief O'Brien, who has been active with Chief of Police Rikhoff in waging a relentless warfare against Protestantism in Indianapolis, will see to it that all his men "kick in" to a slush fund If Bill Armitage, "ex'-professional gambler, puts out the word.
Despite the hopelessness of the
race due tor the fact that Indiana is
overwhelmingly American it now seems that Armitage Is determined
to run Shank for governor in the vain hope that the burlesque per
forming horse trader can. "make the
grade."
TLAMSANftPlATI-
TUDETGIVENOAID
AHORNEY-GENERAL
IS GOOD DRY COP
Arrests Two Drunken Drivers
Near London for Liquor Law Violation
Attorney-General Crabbe turned
executor of the law last Sunday when he arrested two men on the
charge of liquor law violation near
London. He was driving near Lon
don with his wife when he met a
car that swayed back and forth In
the road, and exhibited all the ear!
marks of a liquor car. The attorney-general shouted for -the car to halt, placed the occupants under ar
rest and made them drive to London
with him, where he turned them over to his brother, Prosecutor H. H Crabbe, of Madison county. Aliens Occupy Machine The occupants of the machine were Mike Aback and Frank Bakutil, both foreigners. They had a consignment of liquor in the car, consisting of illicit whisky, a considerable quantity of which they had imbibed. . . "Motoring on country roads is dangerous enough in sobriety," said Mr. Crabbe, "and certainly no mercy should be shown the drunken driver. I want to make an example of these fellows and prevent such reckless endangering of Uvea."
CROWD OF 25,009
CIMRS AT DETROIT
(Continued from Page 1)
the vicinity and strong men stood with hats off and heads bowed while
the solemn prayer was offered. Policemen who were mingling in the crowd doffed their helmets and caps and took part In the ceremony while
"Old Glory" waved beside the burning cross with a soft flutter in the
breeze.
A deep silence again prevailed
when the ceremony was concluded, anA in that snaw rvf time It xtrsks
learned afterward, there came a
complete change of opinion in the
minds of thousands there concerning the Klan. They began to see things
in & far different light than ever before, and joined into the spirit of America with a, gusto when a few minutes later a gigantic and terrific cheer to "Old Glory" and the cross rent the air.
Oisperge In Silence , At a sign from the one who bad led
them in prayer, the cheering ceased.
Everybody homeward bound" were
the words that came from the leader, and without further demonstration, the crowd silently and peacefully dispersed.
It was after this that two police
men removed the cross from its rest
ing place in a spirit of friendliness while the soft peals of distant church bells brought a beautiful ending to
the most gigantic and impressive
Klan demonstration ever held in the
city of Detroit.
his taxes? Nearly every American
citizen, and many aliens, are enrolled
on any one or a cozen rolls, wnicn
rolls are subject to inspecuon. oy
some governmental agency. Bat do
you know of any instance where any honest, law-abiding Individual has
suffered wrong or injustice by virtue of such enrollment? Farther,
the resist ration of the alien seed not
involve the creation of a single aa
dltie&al officer. It can readily be ac
complished, it necessary, by existing
agencies in towns, cities, staets ana
in our nation, v -i - .
"Enrollment of the alien, undoubt
edly Is protection to our country and
to the honest. law-maing alien.
would enable our government to lo
cate and deport the undesirable
alien, anarchist, the red, the crimi
nal and the mentally deficient, many, of whom have gained entrance surreptitiously -and been, lest la out
great centers of population." The address by Mr. White em
braces the principles of the Ku Klux
Klan in Us fight to keep America tor Americans and strongly upholds the contention of th Klaa that-the melting pot has eeassd to function. The Klaa has led the .way ea this vital problem and wtthis the past six
months saaar of the leading ssagft
siiiefl, speakers; 4ueate asd sews
papers oTe" aites into ime. , -
(Continued from Page 1)
pugnacious attitude of the Klansmen
of America that -to going to be the
basis for searching out the unseen forces that govern America; ,4nd facta pertaining to. government and
finances and taxation: searching out
and equalizing the control of our
economic situation, particularly as It
affects farm products and food
products; what particular agencies
control our civic communities, and what particular system it Is that is throttling the upbuilding of our
common school system; what can be
done toward the Americanization of foreigners and aliens -now here, and
compel stoppage of newcomers until this problem has been solved, are Klansmen viewpoints, that, if worth
anything, will stand the test of
American public opinion.
An environment and machinery
for the distribution of these facts has
been established, and the American
public by their response to the Klan
doctrine, millions in number during 1923, are now strong for the supreme act, the building of an organization
different from that ever known be
fore and better, the rendering of
the greatest possible service to all
mankind. Beallj Distinctive Points
These are, in fact, the really dis
tinctive points about the Klan and
the bureau. They will work for law enforcement, better education, better government, or any of the other fundamental ideals for which the Klan aims, but the initiation of their
principles and the preaciiing of their
doctrine is the essential thing.
There are myriads of other organi
zations who think and practice some,
and even all. of these fundamentals,
bat only in the Klan will be found the program and the very form of or
ganization based exclusively on
Americanism in all the word ira plies.
The Klan is simply going beyond
the rest of America in dealing with ideas; with the ideas that the coun
try is suffering much from unas
similated immigration; that there is
too much action by racial and re
ligious groupB ; that attempts are be
ing made to destroy the fundamental Ideas of Americanism, and that the Klan Itself, the greatest forward
movement of the world, has been driven forward and " carried to its
present success by just these ideas
Another service of the department
is that coming under an economic
bead, and i3 based on the fact that
there is a widespread dissatisfaction
among the farmers and that noth
ing really constructive has been, or
is being done, for them, especially
the native American farmer. To
my political friend, when we dis
cussed the farm problem, I called to his attention that he and his , par
ticular group had given to the
farmer only "planks and platitudes"; that the American farmers were see
ing their children forced into occupations they detested ; that their schools were being Invaded by teachers they distrusted; that their Sab
baths were being violated ; that their laws were being broken almost with Impunity; that they were be
ing driven to meet the competition
and methods wholly controlled by alien influences, -and that somewhere deep down and far back in the machinery of government was some in
fluence that was making it mighty
"hard going for the average farmer, Planks and Platitudes
Whereas my political friend from
Indiana would render them planks
and platitudes, the, klan proposes to
give them truthful and unbiased in
formation on the economic problems upon which their troubles -sire
fundamentally predicated. An elab
orate research bureau now installed in Washington and well un
der operation has been and is
searching out the facts for presentation to them as a service rendered by the Klan without thought of re
ward or personal gayi. Incidentally this particular bureau is compiling
at this time a card index record of
every single act of every single individual member now in Congress and likewise the acts of the different department heads, and these records
would be available to Klansmen and other honest seekers as a guidance to them in the development of the
militant Americanism and operative
patriotism.
The Klan is going into action
against all forces that are crowding Anerlcft to the wall simply by ma!n
tainln a 'Christian ciTiUsailoa in
Araenea. Americanism is going to be understandable by all those who
read and think, and Americanism is
the Klan s supreme objective. Who
ever knows what it is and whoever
fights for ft, no matter what his or
her origin or other characteristics,
are among the forces for which the
Klan depends for the success of the principles and the doctrines of
Klancraft.
As recently referred to by an
eminent journalist, they are "the ideals' and the aspirations of the most average men in America."
With its research department, with
its editorial writers on the most vital
subjects in American welfare, with
its state editors and state .news-
gathering organization, all function
ing under the bureau, the Knights of
the Ka Klux Klan Intend to render
what they believe is one ot the
greatest services ever rendered to
American citizenship. With four mil-
lionr Klansmen supporting them
wholeheartedly and unreservedly
and with millions of American citi
zens looking on, and in general in sympathy with these principles, no
one uonbur the necessity ior, nor toe ultimate success of the project it
self. : Secrecy Is Dbcassed . There is a lot of agitation and considerable coaversallon la Washing
ton concerning th secrecy of the
Kltat a& it is amazing how .the
average cttigeg ia Washington really
in measure Beneraliy accepts itu
damentally the principles ot the or
ganisation. -'The average Washing-
toman, however, can sardiy unaer
ia4a "atmospTiere of the most damnable secrecy this side of Russia;
It has been necessary to point out
to some of them that in early days!
or an organization which is putting forward any strong doctrine or program new and controversial, there is danger of retaliation against individual members which may destroy the organization. When it becomes stronger this danger becomes less
and as a better1 understanding of the
organization grows the danger of the
crucifixion of the individual members also grows less. This is proven
by the attitude of the press today and" by the earlier attacks on the Klan and Klansmen physical as well
as oral.
Th- Klan may be out in the open
one of these days. It will make public its membership at any time that those forces that are throttling American ideals and diluting our
American citizenship and livina un
der their own interpretation, if they
nave any, of the Constitution, will come into the spotlight of American
publicity and reveal their intentions,
tneir purposes, their motives, and
when legislation is made all-includ
ing on Its purpose. This applies to political as well as religfoas and fra
ternal organizations.
Moreover, there are great advan'
tagea and a great increase of ef
fectivenes through secrecy in such
an organization. A force which is in
the open and can be seen and eal-
NEWLY-MADE CITIZENS
TOLD TO OBEY LAW
culated Is far less feared fey ft ? rapt official or an anil-American propagandist than one which he can not see. It is far more difficult and far less comfortable to undertake a
conspiracy against good govern
ment or against Americanism u ute conspirator has no means of know ing that the first man in whom he confides his plans may not be ft Klaasman These advantages arc real, and assist in carrying out 'the Klan's ideals. In an open democracy they would not be necessary and might be classed as unfair. la the present condition ef the ceantry..
when it is accessary to combat or- -
ganat!oB using these and even worse methods it would be folly to surrender any advantage. When the time comes that the organizations referred to Abandon their secrecy the Klan will willingly abandon its. 'There is one other reason for secrecy. The Klaa is working for ideals and not for personal ambition, and the secrecy of the membership prevents individual Klansmen from exploiting their membership" for ulterior purposes. Here in Washington this is simply beyond comprehension.
LORAIN, O., Dec. 29. "Obey the
laws of the constitution and the
country Of which you are bow citN
zens, whether or not you believe they
are right," was the admonition of
Judge J. M. Harding to forty-three
members of the night class at Haw
thorne school when they were granted their naturalization papers.
The judge also spoke on the develop
ment of American ideals and the constitution and a short talk also was made by D. W.-Lawrence, member of the board of education, along patriotic lines. Each of the newlymade citizens was given a Bible and a silk American flag together with a copy of the book, "The American Creed and Its Meaning," by Mrs: David E. Stephens, regent of Nathan Perry Chapter of the D. A. R.
BANQUET SPREAD BY WYANDOT CO. KLAN
UPPER SANDUSKY, O., Dec. 31. The Knights of the Ku Klux Klan of Wyandot county spread a banquet to about 450 members Wednesday night at Longabaugh's bjtll. The principal speech was made by a state Klan official. The banquet was prepared and served by Klan members, and it was reported a goodly number of local men affiliated themselves with the organization. '
5,000 MEMBERS IN TUSCARAWAS COUNTY
COSHOCTON, O., Dec. 31. That the membership in the Tuscarawas county Ku Klux Klan has passed the 5,000 was announced by officials of the organization here when the charter was closed a few days ago. A big meeting was held in the auditorium of the Dover American Legion Post Tuesday evening, at which several hundred candidates are said to have been initiated.
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