Fiery Cross, Volume 3, Number 27, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 May 1924 — Page 5
Friday, May 2, 1924
THE FIERY CROSS
EDUCATION'S FIGHT FOR RECOGNITION
(Continued from Page 1)
twentieth ot one per cent. "This fig-
REFUSE TO ACCEPT KLAN ASSISTANCE
(Continued from Page 1)
The stories grew out of an honest
lire is roughly representative of the i desire of Klansmen to aid the com-
Dercentaee ot the time and thought munitv fund, but they wished to
that education may expect to receive from secretaries of the Interior. 13
It not too much to expect that any Secretary of the interior, selected because of his touch with a miscellany of great questions, such as the
know how and where their money
was to be spent. Klan officers asked its members to subscribe to a fund of the Klan to be-sent directly to the Heart of Elkhart Club as a Klan
contribution, designating to what ac
reclamation service, the industry of '. tivity they wished their money to go.
mining, and Indian affairs, will be in I Laws Violated
close touch with the vital problems
of education?
The Seed ol Secretary
Boy Scouts and the Booker T. Washington Community Center, a negro organization. Contributions were made by Klansmen as freely to the Booker T. Washington fund as to any other charity, and the Klan organization has announced that it stands ready to make up one-sixth of the quota set aside for" the Washington fund.
These are all worthy organizations
As in most communities, Elkhart has not ben free of bootleggers and law violators who seemed to be able
Onlv a donartment nf ptinraMon to dodge the regularly-constituted
vith a secretary in the president's I officers. Klansmen have been coa cabinet can expect to command the j trlbuting rather heavily to finance a resources and respect that will lift ! law and order league, and it seemed education to the rightfu'. place right and proper that some of the among the nation's primary inter-! money contributed through the com.t. i ia inn immh in ovnoft th.-it I munity chest should go to this or-
thc- people of the nation, that the ganization. mat was one 01 me congress of the United States, or that stipulations the Klansmen Prodded the 800.000 teachers of the nation when they made their contributions, will be satisfied with a snbmerged I Organisations assisted by the combureuu enjoying a smaller appro-' munity chest include the Associated j.rlation than is made available for Charities, Child Welfare, Red Cross,
thi- use of thp offices of somp of our lorarauimj f""
state superintendents of schools. Why is education a primary national interest? Why dops education deserve to rank with agriculture, commerce and labor? Education ilirectly concerns all of our 110,fiOO.ooo people. Each year 23.000.doo children come under the direct Influence of our 275,000 public schools. Close to $1,500,000,000 is
toeing expended yearly for the main-anfI Klnnsman obiected to con
tenancp of these schools. These i triDutnK to any or all of them, but schools affect every phase of our j they aIso had reas0n to believe that increasingly complex civilization.! community fund could properly The results ot good schools or of distribute a small part of the money Voor schools are not confined to the : colloc-ted to a law enforcement orlocalitles in which schools exist, i ganlzation that has been doing a The Ignorance that reuslts in hook- KI,ipn,iid work. Also. Klansmen
worm in Alabama makes raw cotton j thought, if the Boy Scouts were to more expensive in Massachusetts, j reCPiVe consideration and a part of Tuberculosis in Massachusetts adds the4und. the Junior Klan organizato the cost of an Iowa farmer's tjon U1ight justly come in under the overalls. The negro illiteracy of the ; same head, as the Junior Klansmen south almost overnight becomes the j have been doing a splendid work in problem of Pennsylvania. We are i the community. Therefore, some
all arretted, we are all poorer, when nny of our population is physically or educationally below par. The (ireut National Interest Public education is today a more Important national interest than forest supervision, concrete high
ways, hsh propagation, game pre
ponents of th-e Klan are relying on a split in the Klan rote so as to- put the anti-KIan, or mm-Klan, candidates across." Biive Falls Following this radical action of
the committee tn refusing to accept
the Klan money, it was announced that the quota could not be obtained. Mr. Proctor and his alien friends are to blame. What does Elkhart or what would any Protestant community think of a situation of this sort, engineered and pushed forward by aliens who are willing to kill a great civic movement in order to get even with an American organization because that American organization refuses to permit Roman Catholics as members because those Roman Catholics pledge ytheir allegiance to the Vatican in Rome rather than their allegiance to the United
States? j But the story doesn't end here. The Elkhart Klan is determined that the drive shall be a success, and with a fine feeling of forgiveness
and charity it offers to make up the shortage a3 reported in the press and subscribe $2,500, on condition that the organizations represented in the Heart of Elkhart Club report through a certified public accountant to the people who contribute the money. Will they accept it? Or will the sinister influence prevent it? If so, why?
THUGS DEPUTIZED
BY CITY OFFICIALS
KLAN OFFERS $2,000 REWARD FOR ARRESTS
(Continued from Page 1) ficers of the Klan from Indianapolis. Following a long conference Mayor Browning agreed to permit the meeting and parade to take place if those in charge of the parade would agree not. to march within a block of the Roman Cathoiic church. This was readily agreed to, but
when the parade was forming at the edge of town the street lights were! turned off and the town was in darkness, except the light provided by Klansmen, the rest of the night. Aliens Busy Everything was done by the aliens
to annoy those directing the meeting and parade. The confectionery store of Joseph Ketchum, an agent of The Fiery Cross, was wrecked between 12 and 1 o'clock Friday night. Every window in the building was broken and the store Saturday morning looked
like a cyclone had struck it. Ketchum is a cripple, unable to walk, and
uses a wheel chair. His business has been prosperous and this evi
dently has aroused the ire of the aliens. G. H. Tipps, state representative of The .Fiery Cross, was arrested Saturday because some one said he was soliciting subscriptions to the newspaper. The arrest was made by Charles Lee and his son at the B. & O. station. Lee has the reputation of being the king of the Loogootee bootleggers. He was one of the special deputies with the authority to carry firearms. Tipps was taken
before Mayor Browning accused of
(Continued from Page 1) which the abductors used. The as-
and was merely one of a series of selling newspapers on private prop
such incidents which have been practiced by the alien interests op-
serves, or the control of cattle tick or bovine tuberculosis. These fundamental facts are recognized in the education bill. In one
Klansmen designated that part of
the Klan contribution be divided between these two organizations. Proctor at Work Apparently this aroused Mr. Proc
tor and caused the sinister influences to circulate stories that grew until a South Bend newspaper printed a story that the Klan of Elkhart was trying to gobble the community fund. This was the state of affairs
when Mr. Beardsley arrived in Elk
of its first sections, it provides for; nart irom t.aiiiornia 10 use cun6 the establishment of a department of) as chairman of the drive, fducntion with a secretary of edu- Mr Beardsley called in the secrecation in the president's cabinet. 1 tary of the Klan organization, who Thus, education would receive the readily stated the Klan position. The
recognition which its primary im-
portance in our democracy justifies
posing the Klan in this city. The first outrage of the kind was perpetrated on a cripple who was taken to a vacant house last May and after having been tortured was carried into Kentucky in a machine and thrown out on a lonely road while the machine was speeding at thirty miles an hour. The two latest victims were returning from a Klan ceremony and were seized in Fairview Heights, after having been struck with black
jacks. They were then taken to a
remote spot and tied to trees after having been stripped of their cloth
ing. Before the beating of the men began they were asked to reveal names of members of the Klan order and give the password to the gangsters. When they refused, the aliens began the flogging. When they had completed their work," the men were T -wi n Intn on a 11 -tyiHI la 1 Tl il t 'i Tr fi n
to Fourth and Vine streets, where Tne rng? so placed that if
! nncitlnn nj uut forth hv the Klan offi-
.
This national council on educa
tion would be a tremendous force for better schools. To this body the secretary of education would present the results of the investigations of tlip department of education. Ex
perience would be pooled. The mission of the public school in a democracy would receive careful thought. The results of this great annual conference on education would be carried back to the states by the state superintendents to be adopted by the local school boards in their direction of the schools in making .these schools better meet their local, state and national purposes.
erty. The private property was the station platform of the B. & O. Railroad. Hundreds of persons were about the station, and Tipps stood on his rights that a railway station grounds is not private property in the sense that if is rightfully used by the public. The arrest. Mayor Browning said, was caused by the
B. & O. agent, one the 80 per cent of Romans living at Loogootee. Unable to Make a Case Tippa was held at the mayor's
office for several hours until attorneys searched a law library in an effort to find authority to make a charge against him. Unable to make a charge, 8ipps finally was released on the promise that he refrain from socilciting subscriptions on railroad property.
Five sticks of dynamite, with fuse
caps set, were found under a board near the gate at the grounds where the Klansmen held their meeting.
who would have been responsible? And there was no riot, simply because the Klansmen accepted? the indignities heaped on them witoewt comment or without raising a hand in protest. Huge Snecess With every handicap possible the meeting and parade was the biggest affair Loogootee has- ever had-. Delegations came from Vincenneay Seymour, Bedford, Huntingburg, Petersburg, Oakland City, Oaktown and Princeton. Indianapolis, Kokomo and
other Indiana cities were represented by several persona from each place. The parade formed at the grounds
two miles from the town, and as the
first division reached the city limits the last division was Just moving from the grounds. The parade was headed by nearly fifty men on horseback, followed by 150 or 200 citizens marching without robes. Women of the Klan followed and the- Washington drum corps1, Junior Klansmen, the Vlncennes band and hundreds of automobiles made an imposing pageant. The parade- passed through the business part of the town, coun
termarched and returned to the grounds, keeping a block away from the Roman Catholic church. Several Hundred Initiated
The program at the grounds was unusually interesting, music was provided, refreshments were served
and sl rousing. speech was made by
the Rev. Mr. Polley, a state lecturer. His subject was "Law Enforcement, the Political Situation and the Duties of a Klansmen." It was a splendidly delivered speech and the
Rev. Mr. Polley was cheered repeatedly. The comment following the address proved undoubtedly that the speaker touched a popular chord with his hearers. The celebration ended with a public wedding and this feature sent the crowd away in a joyful attitude.
Mayor Browning could not be found in Loogootee Saturday night, and the story in circulation was that
he had been spirited away to Shoals. No one seemed to have an explanation for this.
Wig- Wags From Washington (Bareaa Puftlkati&a and EdMatim)
WASHINGTON, April 23. Don't be an alarmist for America, ia not doomed. George- Washington had his trials and tribulations and he surmounted them all. So did Abraham Lincoln; ao have all our presidents survived and come out on top of all their knotty problems.
This country may be smeared up a little with oil now, but it is better to lose an oil reserve or two than ta
lose faith in our government. Up to
date we have not lost even one oil reserve, and be assured that the gov
ernment at Washington strH lives and is going on and on. There are too many good Americans In this country to let ft be otherwise. Criminal proceedings are under way against former Secretary Fall and Doheney and Sinclair and those In authority promise that no guilty
man shall escape. That is as it
should be, only there might well be a little more speed with the legal end of the prosecution. Congress is gradually getting away from the endless investigations and seems to be settling down to its many legislative tasks for the good of the country and its people. Business is getting back to normal
in Washington and it looks like Con
gress is going to rush business from now on in an effort to get through before June 10. the date of the Republican national convention at Cleveland. President Coolidge seems to have made a hit In his New York speech In serving notice on Europe to put its own house in order and then talk
to Uncle Sam about a program of helpfulness. Mr. Coolidge wishes to make sure in his own mind that Europe is willing to promise to be good before she comes at us for more
favors.
All child labor laws, so far enacted have been declared unconstitutional by the supreme court. We need legislation on this subject that will stick.
The War en Billboards
RESCUE GIRL FROM
CATHOLIC SCHOOL
(Continued from Page 1) find proper, and the girl was 'a member of the troupe by her mother's consent.
Hprrses Her Opinion Four weeks after the show opened, the mother reversed her opinion for
no apparent cause, for as she stated on the stand, there was no reason to believe the show less proper than at the time she gave her consent for the girl's appearance in it. The father said that this about-face was the result of pressure and influence exerted by Roman Catholics so that the girl could be returned to a Roman Catholic industrial school, in which she had once been a pupil. The father and the girl are Protestants and bitterly resented this proposal. Following the technical arrest of the girl, a "female onVer from the Knoxville juvenile court arrived, obtained a taxlcab for an immediate
drive into Knox county, and de
manded of the sheriff's wife (in whose custody the girl was placed)
that she be surrendered. Forcibly Rescued Over the protest of the sheriff's
w ife the girl was taken by the Knoxville officer and placed in the taxicab. She was taken from the dining room, permission being refused her to finish her dinner. A Klansman interceded and obtained a writ of habeas corpus. The writ was served by the clerk of the court, but was Ignored. It was said in court that the Knoxville officer held so tightly to the girl that the markings of her fingers were in the girl's arm several hours later. When it became evident to Klansmen that the writ would not be honored, they surrounded the automobile, lifted up Its curtains, and forcibly restrained the woman while the girl was taken from her bodily.
Klansmen then arranged bond for
the girl h appearance, and accorded
otftr nnancial assistance to the father. Also, they obtained counsel and financed the defense. Klansmen
flocked from all parts of the county to attend the trial, and the decision of the court was pooular. for the
girl had found a home in the hearts
or tne citizens of Jonesboro.
cer was that the organization was
determined to see that the drive was
a success and that the organization stood willing to make any contribution that would insure this success. The secretary suggested that if the club would supply the Klan contrib
utors w'th hearts, as :t had provided other contributors, it might materially aid in the soliciting. Mr. Beardsley promised the Klan 1,000 "Hearts" to start with the next morning. All seemed to be harmony. At the meeting ot the 100 workers that night at a banquet, Mr. Beardsley explained the situation and then left for Indianapolis. Here was a
fine opportunity for co-operation to put over a community project. But no, the sinister influence appears. The Klan is accused by implication,
if not directly, with unsavory motives, if not with criminal intent. The sinister influence exerts itself, overworks itself, until it defeats the
efforts of the Klan to co-operate with
the council. The "Hearts" are refused to the Klan, discrediting Mr. Beardsley's promise and injecting discord and distrust tn the council and the community. Why? For any moral end or any community bet
terment? No! Just to fight the Klan an institution of real, red-
blooded Americans.
- ,
uniario prouaiy announces a reduction of taxation amounting to al-
mcwi ti.tv per capita.
A Sample of Hatred And then followed this story, printed in the South Bend Tribune under an Elkhart date line by "a staff correspondent": "A barefaced attempt by the Ku Klux Klan to solicit funds for itself, under the guise of the citywide joint charity drive now in progress, has been expo.frd here with the result that the scheme has been checked. "Pledge cards printed by the Heart of Elkhart committee for its annual citywide charity drive listed seven organizations, one of which was the
Booker T. Washington Community Center, a negro settlement. "The Klan, wholly without author
ity from the Heart committee, printed its own pledge cardselimlnating the negro settlement from the
list and substituting the Junior Ku Klux Klan and a law enforcement league which is understood to be a
dummy Klan organization. It intended to canvass its own member
ship and handle the money raised through the local Klavern.
"When those in charge of the drive
heard of the Klan scheme, they went
to officers or the Klan and aaked them to turn the money they raised into general headquarters, instead of handling it through the Klavern.
Some of the charity fund leaders
were content to let it go at that
However, R. E. Proctor, local at
torney, who had been active in the
campaign, took a different view of
the matter and at a dinner of work
ers in the Hotel Elkhart Wednesday
evening, vigorously denounced the unauthorized Klan scheme, with the result that the workers voted to repudiate the Klan campaign, even if it meant the failure of the drive. "The action by the committee, following Mr. Proctor's talk, was practically the first setback that the Klan has received In Elkhart. It has endeavored to gain control of various
civic enterprises and has met with a
measure of success. "Both Democratic and Republican lists of county candidates are crowded with Klanamem. Of the thirteen aspirant for the sheriffship all but two are said to be Klansmen. Op-
they were abandoned without clothing. Due to the illness of the wife of one of the men, their names have been withheld.
According to reports, the police are making very little effort in ferreting out the persons responsible for the ontrage or the actual perpetrators. In the opinion of thousands here, the attitude of Mayor Carrel is refected in the feelings exhibited by those gnilty of the outrage. Recently the Klan asked that a permit
be issued for a parade next June,
when the Klan will hold a big meeting here. Mayor Carrel "took the
matter under advisement," saying
that he believed "those antagonistic to the Klan might start trouble."
Mayor Carrel admitted that he did not believe the Klan to be composed of persons that would create a disturbance, but that those opposed to
the Klan organization would be guilty of starting trouble if there was trouble started should the Klan parade. That the aliens of Cincinnati are piling up the strongest indictments against themselves is most evident by the opinions freely expressed by persons once opposed to the Klan organization through lack of information of its true character, but who
now realize that such an organization is necessary if America is to be saved from the disgraceful tactics and outrages of an element which
rises up against an organization because it has none but native-born Americans in it. While it ia regrettable that such an incident should happen within America, and that men should suffer torture, it must be said in all truth that the membership of the Klan in this county has profited by the outrage. It is also to be regretted that the police of this city are not making more effort to stamp out such lawlessness and to find the men re
sponsible for the latest outrage aa
well as those that have gone before.
A salesman for The Fiery Cross has
been attacked three times. Injuries he suffered the last time almost
proved fatal.
PLAT BALL The Terre Haute Klan baseball team is hard at work to round out a first-class aggregation. The team would like to book games with Klan
teams ta Indiana and Illinois for
any Saturday afternoon or Sunday. For games communicate with the manager, P. O. Box 221, Terre Haute,
Ind.
an automobile had passed over the
plank the percussion caps would have exploded the dynamite. It is said there was enough dynamite to have, caused the upheaval of the ground hundreds of feet surrounding the place where it was planted.
Hundreds of persons were in this area and automobiles were parked as thickly as they ewaM he arranged. Among the deputies sworn in, it
is said by visitors to Loogootee, that any number of them were drunk. One of the deputies who carried two army pistols strapped at his waist is known as a half wit.
With 20,000 to 25,000 visitors this class of citizens were turned loose with loaded revolvers. Had there been a riot we ask Mayor Browning
Forty per cent of the soot falling in Salt Lake Cfty was found to be combustible, and therefore waste fueL
Here Is something for Klansmen to think seriously ahout: Do we want to work our children or educate them? There are today 1,000,000 children employed in working establishments in this country and one-third of them? are under 14 years. There are eleven states in thla union that permit children under 18 years
to worn or be worked without violating any law. If this continues what can we expect of future generations?
The nation-wide movement against billboards that desecrate nature's beauty on the main highways from Maine to California has made strong headway. The Standard Oil Company of New York has agreed to remove any of its outdoor signs not approved by an impartial committee. The Standard Oil Company ot California also has agreed to co-operate, and it la expected that the Standard companies of other states will follow suit. A number of other Important firms have promised to fur
ther the work of the National Committee for the Restriction of Outdoor Advertising. The influence of this group headed by the Standard will be tremendous on the commercial world. For it is not to be auspeeted that philanthropy alone is the motive behind the conversion. These companies.
must have awakened to the tact that advertising which offends, a great many customers is poor business. Will people who grit their teeth at the sign of an oil company buy their gasoline from that company, only to be confronted again and again with its signs? Will motorists buy machines, tires and accessories of firms which reduce the enjoyment of motoring by defacing the landscape?
Various states are combating the billboard evil by prohibiting the erection of billboards on rights of way. This does not get at the signs placed on private property. The surest method Is to teach the public and the billboard advertisers that the way to advertise is not to ruin the appearance of the country with solid walls of billboards from one end of the land to the other. St. Louis Post-Dispatch.
We are against any division ot the school fund, and against any appropriation of public money for sectarian purposes, or recognition in any form of state-aided parochial schools. Theodore Roosevelt
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ENEMY CIRCULATES YARNS AT TELL CITY
Romanists Try to Cover Own Tracks by Accusing Klan of Being Political Organization
TELL CITY, Ind., April 25. The Roman Catholic priests ol Perry countyare circulating the statement that the Klan is an organized political order. However, the Protestant people in this district are very much interested in these un-American remarks and are waking up. Such re
marks have convinced, them as ta who really is playing politics. The Flaming Circle, one ot the Catholic organizations, is also busy spreading propaganda. It is said to have circulated the rumor that the Men's Community Bible Class is nothing more than Klan headquarters, which is a positive untruths The membership ot this class, how
ever, has materially increased since the Klan became active.
Crosses were burned Saturday
night at the neighboring towns ot Troy, Cannelton, Bristow, Rome and
Doomtle Mille, also Tell City. Th!
marks the beginning ot the spring
drive in the county.
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