Fiery Cross, Volume 3, Number 25, Indianapolis, Marion County, 18 April 1924 — Page 5
Friday, April 18, 1924
THE FIERY "CROSS PAGE TIYE
THREE CHILDREN ARE i HELD IN A CONVENT
i (Continued from Page 1) took the family of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur B. Knarr. There were four little children in the home, a son
and three daughters. The mother
was caught under a belief of in sanity and has been confined at Lake
land, the state institution for the in
sane. The father, a steel worker, lost his place in a strike In Newport. He was unable to get steady work here and went to Syracuse, K. Y. Before he could get on his feet financially, a cousin with whom the children had been left, was stricken with illness and could no longer look after the children.
Knarr had no money with which to
'NO BIBLETN SCHOOL,' SAYS MAYOR DURGAN
(Continued from Page 1) supporting him in his race, fell away from him. That Mayor Durgan should still show his aversion to the Bible in the public schools and discuss this. featureot his "anti" cam
paign, amazed those who heard his talk, or read of it in the local newspapers. While, of course, it would probably be very hard to find a person who would be so bold as to predict success for Mr. Durgan, it would appear to many here, as in other parts of Indiana, that the "antiKlanner" would not persist in something that will make his vote more ridiculous than it would otherwise be.
It has been voiced about that pos
return to Newport, and it was a fine sibly Mayor Durgan's chief reason
chance fov ttie authorities of the con- for continuing his campaign is to vent at Ft. Thomas to appear. - make opportunities to speak against
They took the children with the the Bible in the schools. Mr. Dur
stipulation mat the father pay $6 a week for their board and bed. It
was a temporary arrangement, the
gan spoke throughout Indiana for the un-American Unity League,
primarily a Roman Catholic organ-
f.-thfr thnnsrlit. He was far from ization. fostered by rairicK u AJon
home and lie agreed to the plan. As i nell and Joe Roach, and organized
Boon, as the father could get on his
feet he returned to Newport and carried out his part of the agreement to pay the weekly board of his children. Finally he became ill and (Cot behind on the weekly payment. When he recovered and found work he immediately provided a home for the children, and went to the convent to get the little ones. Held for Debt Imagine . this father's surprise,
when, on reaching the convent he was told that he could not have his children until the board bill was paid. At the same time permission .was refused the father to see his 'children. Knarr was broken-hearted, but he did not know his rights in the case. Finally he appealed to a friend who knew something of the laws of the ration. The friend got busy, and with three women and Mr. Knarr visited the convent. Mr. Knarr re-
to fight the Klan, and it is thought
possible that his real mission is to fight the Bible in the schools. It is indisputably a fact that the Roman
Catholic hierarchy does not want the Bible in the public schools, which are dubbed Godless by its different agents, and going upon this theory, the opinions of many persons may not be far wrong. Evansvllle Wonders The people of Evansville can not
understand why Mayor Durgan continues his speeches when he greets such extremely small audiences as that which appeared here, especially in view of the fact that his speech was advertised in the daily newspapers days before it took place.
This, however, may, in the opinion of many, have been just that which held down his audience. The advertisement stated that " 'Dr.' Durgan caused the council of that city (Lafayette) to pass the first anti-
Klan ordinance in the United States
rewed his request for the release of j and for two years has been wagjng
his children. In the presence of the
unremitting warfare against the
. . . , . . t- Man. "ion know, Mr. Knarr, you owe a Tho BjvPaplI,nnt nnt En on
considerable board bill and we car i; ,Q gav howeveri that the Klan pros. not let you have your children until j pem,- KreatIy un(ler the fire of Mayor! that is paid. Durgan. It did not say that his opOne of the friends then asked that j position had brought tens of hunthe mother superior be culled. She J a reds into the Klan ranks in Tippecame and Mr. Knarr repeated the j canoe county. It is quite a wellrequest for the release oMris chil-; known fact that the Klan met with dren. The same reply came from ' such great success in the aforementhe mother superior that the father Uoned county that it went so far as could not have his children until i to purchase the controlling interest the board bill was paid. in the cour. fair grounds and held One of the friends asked the j one of the' most, if not the most, mother superior: "Suppose this successful county fairs last fall that
man should never be able to pay that debt, how long do you propose to hold his children?" "Till they are grown and educated," she replied. Blurts to the Last Tin woman stood on this bluff,
brazenly, until she found that the tii'Tv's in Mr. Knarr knew their rights. It was necessary to threaten suit before she would relinquish possession of them. However, it was a revelation to Mr. Knar' to see how quickly the Kqiuh irinjtf when they find they
have bluffed thir bluff to the limit.! The reunion of those little girls' with that father was one of the hap- j piest ;ind most touching scenes the, writer has ever witnessed. A lesson was taught that this con-1 vent will not soon forget. There are i other lessons also necessary, maybe.:
There are a number of Newport citi
was ever held in that county
Tlays Too Spectacular The spectacular methods used by Mayor Durgan In his fight against the Klan, which is the most staunch upholder of the Bible, which the mayor would keep from the school children of America while they were at classes, and who compared it unfavorably with a year book, brought many members Into the organization.
"If," said one prominent citizen of
Evansville, "Mayor Durgan is actually running for governor of the state of Indiana, I can but marvel at his methods."
WHAT HAVE POLICE DONE, CITIZENS ASK (Continued from Page 1) and one to thirty days in jail. Ralph (Gypp) Blue, who was
charged with violating the liquor laws and who was under $1,000 bond, fled and his bond has been declared
forfeited. Samuel Blue, his uncle,
was on his bond.
Those who were to have been tried today were Thomas Hackett, Fred and Claude Steinmetz and
Charles Braden. A warrant has
been issued for George Pope
charged with operating a gambling house, but the officers have failed to find him and the good citizens here are hoping he has shaken the dust of Peru from hi3 feet, even as Blue
has done. Last December the Federal men
came to town. rney maae tne rounds of the places where liquor was reported to have been sold and, after collecting the evidence and completing their "liquor shopping," they turned over their Information to the circuit court and the grand jury. Boasted of Protection
As an instance of how much the local police were feared in any real
clean-up movement, Hackett is credited with telling the Federal officers, with whom he naturally was not familiar, that he had "protection" and that when the Federal men came to town he would be tipped off. Claude Steinmetz is accredited
with a certain fear of the mayor, but he is alleged to have told the Federal men the sheriff was O. K. Witnesses say they have seen the police go in and out- of the place operated by Blue. Needless to say the Knights of the
Ku Klux Klan here had much to do with providing information of benefit to the Federal officers. In connection with the trials, many residents who are familiar with the liquor situation are wondering what has happened to thirty quarts of liquor taken in a raid on a booze car some months ago. The car was spotted on the streets and a resident told the police it had liquor
in it. The police made the raia ana
got the liquor and no one, not connected with the police force, has been able to ascertain yet what has happened to this booze. More Difficult to Get As a result of the raids in the last few months, liquor is somewhat more difficult to obtain than it has been at any time since the prohibition law was put into effect. Even Hiram W.
(Hikin' Hiram) Bearss, candidate for congress from this district, has
not been mixing as freely recently
as he did a few months ago. But
then, residents here say Hiram's race for congress has had a sobering effect and reported instructions from the physician to the effect. Hiram now says he is absolutely In favor of enforcing the Volstead act. Hiram is the same person, who, some months ago, sought, with poor success, to drive his machine through a Klan parade.
FIERY CROSS QUOTED ON HOUSE FLOOR
STATE TROOPS GUARD LILLY PROTESTANTS
JOHNSON BILL PASSES AND STAGGERS FOE
the
(Continued from Page 1)
foreigners. Especial watch
zens aroused to see that this hutch-, foeinc kept over the Rev. F. Brown,
ery of the utican ot Home confine ; i ,,,theran minister, who conducted a ! horausp of the known fact that the -ntnnia,, thot their v.- tn onoA
(Continued from Page 1)
Cross carried a story in which it was declared that excessive propaganda favoring the Catholic church was getting the opponents of a drastic immigration law into hot water. This, it was explained, was
(Continued from Page 1) news report in the flaming paper, and I read: "Congressman Cable, one of the sponsors of the immigration bill, was determined that a vote be urged with the least possible delay, so he obtained the following written promise from Mr. Longworth. "Then we find the written promise was the statement given to the press
by Mr. Long-worth m outlining the
legislative program of the House some ten days ago and I quote from
the so-called written promise as con.'
tained in the paper: "The immigration bill will be considered immediately following the passage of these bills.
"The bills referred to being the
regular appropriation bills Cracks at Dayton
"Then turning the pages of The Fiery Cross to the editorial section, we And this startling pronuncia-
mento : "For those who may not be
aware of it, it might be stated here that Ohio is one of the chief strongholds of the Klan, ranking next to Indiana, which at this time leads the nation in Klandom. Taking Ohio as a single unit, Dayton is one of the strongest Klan cities in Ohio. Dayton is 'Klan all through.' "And then let me read the next editorial criticizing one of the great New York dailies, the Brooklyn Eagle, and it is not necessary for
me to go to the defense of that great daily. There is no better, more loyal nor square daily in this whole country than the Brooklyn Daily Eagle. That paper is not of bi-political faith, nor of my school of politics. It often criticizes me and does so squarely, but I will say right here that its ownership, its editorial staff, is of the very highest type of Americans, and nothing that may be said by The Fiery Cross can in the slightest affect the standing of that paper or its
personnel. But let me read: "The entire country is aware that the Catholic and the Jew are for unrestricted imm igration. Americans, however, are not. They see the deadly menace that faces America at this critical time. It is possible that the editor of the Eagle, too, sees the menace; but with less than 1,000,000 people who are of white, Protestant, Gentile, American extraction in a city of approximately 6,000,000 souls, it is only natural that the Eagle should play to the overwhelming majority. . "There is hardly any doubt but that the editor really meant the people of New York City are not for it. Some kind person should send the Eagle editor a map of the United States that he might learn
1 that America only starts in New
York and runs clear to the Pacific ocean before stopping. Also inform him that the opinion of 'the average New Yorker' is not necessarily the opinion of the millions of Americans west of Jersey City. "I read these quotations to show the warp-minded attitude of the official organ of the hooded organization and to demonstrate the one-sid-edness of its argument. New Torler Badly Stan; "The Fiery Cross of April 4, 1924, states that thousands of letters are being received by Mr. Johnson from
New York, and that New Yorkers
the efforts ot the Ku Klux Klan, be
cause their representatives ia Congress are going to vote against the
bill.
"Why, gentlemen, I have a whole
file full of the publications, and I
say to you that the leaders responsible for the activities of the Ku Klux Klan are doing more to divide this country and to divide the people of a country than any agency that ever
existed in the history of the world. These arguments are read all over the conntry. You can not prevent the people of the east forming their
opinion of this organization. LaGuardia Raves "They can not understand how you 'can stand up for Americanism, how you want to shut the doors against those who you believe do not understand American traditions and
how, in the darkness of night, these same people, with masks or hoods, will take some poor defenseless negro and chastise him by corporal punishment or by hanging him, and burning down the houses of the poor undefended negro they can not understand why, in order to create law and fear, te establish brutal dominance, it is necessary to burn
the very symbol of Christianity which they have been brought up from infancy to revere and worship ; they can not understand why it is that this organization has directed its activities and the power of its organized forces at a group of people, at races and religions who are de
fenseless, who want to take their
place in the one big American family.
Do you not see the harm that is being done, what irreparable .harm is
being doue, and in the name of the,
same God we all worship and for the glory of our flag? I ask the Ku Klux
Klan to take off their masK ana to
meet us in the light ot day to talk
these things over and to act in ac
cordance with the best interests and
in accordance with the tradition and spirit of America." LaGuardia Trapped Just as Mr. LaGuardia closed the above speech, Representative Raker of California arose and this is what happened: Mr. Raker "Will the gentleman
yield?"
Mr. LaGuardia "Certainly." Mr. Raker "Would the gentleman mind telling the committee, if he knows, about an organization com
posed of abont 1,200 lodges with about 150,000 members to which you can not belong unless you speak and write a foreign tongue?" And LaGuardia, the Italian congressman from New York, dodged the question.
MURPHY FINDS KLAN GUILTY OF LILLY RIOT
(Continued from Page 1) one Roman Catholic was fatally
shot. Every factory and store in the town was closed for the funeral of the Roman. On the other hand,
no store closed, no shop was idle when the Klansman was buried. The crepe on the Klansman's door was soaked in oil the night it hung on the home. This in a city in the great free
America, where the Romans claim only 15 per cent of the population, yet where they insist the church of Rome shall make America Roman Catholic. It is no idle boast. The
Romans are bent on doing it, and they are trying by Just such tactics as those displayed at Lilly, Perth
Amboy and many other cities to frighten, the weak-kneed Protestants into' submission.
WOMEN AT WILSON BURIAL CLINTON, Ind., April 12. The funeral services of Mrs. Flo Wilson, postmistress here, who died Sunday, March 23, were held at 2 o'clock the following Wednesday at the Bethlehem church in Universal. Mrs. Wil
son was a member of the Women of
the Ku Klux Klan, and ten women of that order gathered at the grave in Riverside cemetery and offered silent prayer. They left an American flag and a cross of roses.
Part of the Propaganda
It is part of this propaganda that
such men as Charles O'Brien Murphy
hop Into print to find Klansmen guilty of every crime under the sun
when a body of Klansmen, driven to
protect their lives against a mob of
Romans, protected by city officials
refuse to protect the citizens they
are sworn to protect "when they take office. Lilly, Pa., is only one ot the many American cities where these affairs are going on. Ask yourself if it is not time for the principles of the Knights of the Ku Klux Klan to toe duly considered and acted on by the Protestant citizenship of America? Mr. Murphy is of the ilk that would rule America from Rome. He is of the brand that pledges allegi
ance to a pope in Rome before his American flag. He is of the gang, that when it parades the streets.
has the flag ot Ireland on the staff above the American flag. He is of
that type who are working day and
night to obtain control of the American free schools. In breaking into
print this alien rushes into a New York newspaper to find guilty a body
of American Protestants, before trial, of every crime in the crimminal code. Protestant Indianapolis should feel proud of its Charles O'Brien Murphy. He wished as large a field as possible for his jury verdict. He overlooks his Indianapolis newspapers, and rushes his filth into the New York Times, a fertile field for such
slush. The Times and the pro-Roman New Y'ork World never turn
down any article against the Knights
of the Ku Klux Klan. Morpliy's Verdict Here is the verdict rendered by Charles O'Brien Murphy against Protestant Americans who finally fought back at Lilly, Pa., when they
were trapped by a mob of Romans bent on murder: , "To the Editor of The New York Times : "Charles Dickens supplies the words that express my thoughts on the subject of the Ku Klux Klan disturbances now prevalent in many parts of our country, in his preface to the third edition of 'Barnaby Rudge published in 1841. The tale of 'Barnaby Rudge' was projected In order to present the very remarkable and extraordinary features of the Gordon riots of 1780. Dickens said:
It is unnecessary tn sv that
these shameful tumults, while they
reuectea inaeiiDie disgrace upon the time in which they occurred, and all who had act or part in them, teach a good lesson. That what we falsely
cau a reugious cry is easily raised by men who have no religion, and who in their daily practice set at naught the commonest principles of right and wrong; that it is begotten of Intolerance and persecution; that it is senseless, besotted, inveterate and unmerciful, all history teaches us. But perhaps we do not know it in our hearts too well to profit by so humble and familiar an example as the riots of 1780.' "This religious cry always has been and always will be raised 'by men who have no religion.'
Lt us hope this painful experi
ence of our beloved country will 'teach a good lesson." Let us regard it as the 'growing pains' of a
young and healthy nation, and let those of us who have been made to suffer cultivate that spirit of sacrifice which inspired our great American patriots to give up their lives that America might live. "It is as useless to resist as the hurricane, and it is as certain to pass on."
MADISON COUNTY W0MENARE ACTIVE ANDERSON, Ind., April 12. The Women's' Organization of Southern Madison county is very much alive, They are npt in the habit of talking much. The chief work for the past year has been in the interest of the new Protestant hospital. The women have already given $5,000 to the fund and now that the site is chosen and actual work is to begin, they .expect to do much more during the
spring and summer. Through efforts of the women Bibles have been placed in almost every school in the city and surrounding towns. Sixtyfive of these Ipibles were bought by the women. The Women's Organization is having a steady, substan-" tial growth in membership. The women are determined that the town, the county, the state and the nation, shall be a cleaner, better place for coming generations.
its propaganda work to its own tribe. These citizens are going to insist on it to the letter.
GREAT CROWD SEES i KLAN IN ACTION i (Continued from Page 1) was full, and many were decorated
with Hugs and pennants, A large electric fiery cross attached to the front of one of the automobiles, drew thunderous applause from the vast crowds as it made its way slowly along the line of march. Horsemen in full Klan regalia at both the front aud rear of the parade also drew applause, as did many of the flouts representing certain principles and ideals of the great American order. Special cars from South Bend and Elkhart were among the machines and delegates
lrom Plymouth, Laporte, Rochester
series of meetings here recently at Roman hierarchy was one of the j Up0n Congressman Johnson and upon
wnicn ne toon tne luwiess eremeni strongest opponents or lmmigratuiu to task. At a recent gathering of . laws that would really restrict being j the foreign element, a shot was fired 1 passed. The desperate fight being;
LAFAYETTE, Ind., April 12. In the death, of Mrs. Cora Miller, Lafayette, R. R. D, Tippecanoe county Ku Klux Klan has lost a very capable sister and worker. The funeral was held in M. E. church of Buck Creek, conducted by the Rev. Mr. Goodrich. It was largely attended at the church by neighbors and friends. At the grave at Springvale cemetery about fifty Klanswomen conducted the last services and placed a floral offering in the shape of a fiery cross on the grave.
made by alien interests to stop the Johnson immigration bill and the : many columns of Catholic propa-j ganda coming at the same time did ; much to awaken Americans and ! focus their attention more forcibly J onthe immigration bill. I The story declared that the propa
ganda was acting as a boomerang. The vote on the Johnson immigration bill has proven the story true. Even 9taunch backers of the Johnson bill were not optimistic enough to believe that such vote could be recorded in favor of the measure although they are confident of its passage. Aliens Staggered Staggered by the vote on the measure, alien interests suddenly re-
hicle in which the fiery cross was ! covered and today in wasmngton, carried to the meeting place of the these interests are feverishly in conKlansmen. A messenger, it is said, ference and pulling strings. Sena-m-a lmrrieil to a Pittshureh clear-1 tors realize that the hundreds of
1 1 1 1 1 1 I tviiu'Ulil, L,rt yui if, iui;iieHn;r, J , . ,i ii..t.:.. ii..i.... j .line' hmisp in order to eet funds to I congressmen who voted for the
i ,n t.,....n ,.,..,,!,., take care of the predicted run on the i Johnson bill jsere voicing the wish
in I n 'I in rnun mi. n u,.i:i7'Tiuu. I A large number of high officials bank.
were nresent :ind after the uroces- l-.smer Manna, 15, a rroiesiani
that narrowly missed Mrs. Brown
while she was at home. Several of the foreigners, it is said, are being held by the authorities in connection with this. It is alleged that the local branch of the United Mine Workers is completely dominated by Catholicism,
and the discharging of several mem-
bers on the charge that they were members of the Klan is believed by many to have been the first step of the assault that seemed to be well planned by the foreign element. The First National bank is said to have had its troubles over the affair and it is reported that a number of depositors withdrew their accounts, alleging that the president of the bank had a hand in hiring the ve-
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Kion disbanded, a closed meeting was! Kirl of Lilly, was attacked . before j cats know that the senators are
held at which many of the officers
gave addresses. ' Th highways leading from town were filled with machines far into tlie niKlit, after the ceremonies were over and the parade was the chief topic of conversation. It lias been said by some that they
would not believe Warsaw would have a parade until they saw it. All that the skeptical can say now is, that they did see it, and that it was (in actual living, breathing representation of the spirit of America that will not die.
the riot began, and suffered a frac
tured leg. Her condition is serious.
KLANSMEN VISIT - J0NESB0R0 CHURCH
THREADBARE ARGUMENT AGAIN PROVEN FAULTY
COr.VIL BLUFFS, la., April 12. The threadbare argument that the Klan is "against" the colored race
was shot to fragments here last Sunday when the local unit of the order contributed $100 to the Bethel African Methodist Episcopal church toward lifting the church debt. A note enclosing the money was sent to the Rev. W. M. Majors. It has entirely changed the attitude of the local negro community toward the Klan. The Rev. Majors, in his Sunday sermon, expressed appreciation for the Kift.
JONESBORO, Ind., April 12. On
the last night of the revival services held here recently at the Jonesboro Friends church by Pastor C. M. Elliott, thirteen members of the Ku Klux Klan came forward and presented the pastor and h's assistant with a substantial purse and a letter recommending their good work. After the presentation was made, another set of Klansmen appeared wi an additional gift, together with praise for The good work being done. The latter group of Klansmen rep
resented the Marion Klan, while those who appeared first were from the local organization. Prayer and song service was held in which the Klansmen took part. The Rev. Mr. Elliott was very much
realizing this and they fear that cer
tain senators on whom they had counted are beginning to see the handwriting on the wall. Every method of vire-pulling has been put into play and from now on the immigration measure will be the source of a fight to the finish. With a presidential election coming on
and with the mood of the American
people reflected in the vote of the house, the alien interests realize that
to delay or defeat the Johnson lm
migration bill will prove a monu
mental task.
The house has shown itself over
whelmingly American, and the ques
tion, "Will the senate remain
American?" is being freely asked.
TAKES LAWREXCEBURG CHURCH
LAWRENCEBURG, Ind., April 12. The Rev. Edgar L. Mullins has
been called as pastor of the Baptist church here, and will move to this
place to take charge May 1. Mr.
Mullins was presented with a purse
and a letter of recommendation In-
surprised at the sudden appearance I dorsins hia good work, by the
of the Klansmen and expressed him- Knights of the Ku Klux Klan some self as greatly pleased. He thanked months ago when he was preaching
the Americans for their gifts which
were greatly appreciated by himself and his assistant.
in Decatur county. He is a forceful
speaker and a fearless preacher of
the Gospel of Jesus Christ.
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