Fiery Cross, Volume 3, Number 38, Indianapolis, Marion County, 18 July 1924 — Page 8

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k a. j 3- J -rt--PAGE EIGHT THE PiERY CROSS Friday; July 18, .1924 .

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Here and There in Klandom

EXPERTS CONTRADICT

THE 'WHITE' INDIANS

PUBLIC DEMONSTRATION PORTSMOUTH, N. H., July 12. The Ku Klux Klan of Kittery held a public demonstration last week, several hundred members marching through the streets o the town. An outdoor ceremonial was held. Dr. Gayer, newly-appointed King Kleagle for Maine, New Hampshire and Vermont, spoke on the objects of the order.

guests of the Alum Bank recently. A service was held In the Evangelical church which was In charge of the pastor, Rev. E. I. Mankamyer, assisted by Rev. R. V. Clemens, of the Methodist church at Wolfsburg.

MINISTERS CO-OPERATE CENTRALIA, 111., July 12. Under

the direction of the Great Titan of Province No. 1, the co-operation of the 400 Protestant ministers, with pastorates In this territory's thirtynine counties, is planning a drive to make Klansmen out of all Protestants and church members out of all Klansmen in tho Province. A threeday conference will be held at Sailor Springs, a Klan resort near Flora, during July, to discuss the program.

KLANTAUQUA HELD DANVILLE, III., July 12. A pa

rade with members in full regalia, and a ceremonial, featured the Klan-

tauqua held at Lincoln Park on June 25, 26 and 27. Robed Klansmen of Danville Klan No. 14 attended the recent funeral of Klansman Alva

Knowles, an escort of Klansmen accompanying the body from the church to the cemetery, where a Klan funeral service was held.

TWO STATES MEET SHELDON, la., July 12. Klan delegations from Sioux City, Rock Rapids, Cherokee, Spencer, Hawarden, Spirit Lake, Mason City, Des Moines,

Perry and a number of other towns

of northwest Iowa and southern

Minnesota, gathered here recently to participate in a Klan demonstration,

which proved to be one of the larg

est of the many Klan meetings that have recently taken place in these

parts.

Declare Richard O. March Is

Mistaken in South American Natives

MINISTERS' WORK APPRECIATED

LAUREL, Miss., July 12. Fifty Klansmen visited Wausau Baptist

church. West End Baptist church and the First Baptist church, presenting a substantial gift of money to ministers conducting revivals in each place. Letters accompanying the donations told of the Klan's appreciation of the revivalists' work.

KLANSMEN WELCOMED AVELLA. Pa., July 12. Forty-five robed Klansmen attended services at the Methodist church of EldersviUc, recently, and the following Sunday gathered at the Presbyterian chiirch, where the pastor, Rev. E. L. Stehman, delivered an interesting sermon to the Klansmen and members of the church. Rev. J. L. Brown, pastor of the first church visited, cordially welcomed the Klansmen.

SPECIAL TRAINS USED BRISTOL, Tenn., July 12. Special trains brought hundreds of Klans

men and their friends to Bristol to participate in the great Klan celebration, which took place here recently. The program for the day began at 9 o'clock jn tha morning when the local Klansmen marched to the trains to receive the visiting delegations, and ended at 10:30 in the evening with a grand display of fireworks.

KLANSMEN' ARE THANKED TEMPE, Ariz., July 12. R. A. Chestnut of Scottsdale, occupying a

front seat at .a recent service in the Christian church here, arose at the conclusion of the. sermon by Rev. Carl Wild, pastor, and announced that the Ku Klux Klan, learning of a small indebtedness of the church, wished to assist in the settlement of the debt. Handing the pastor one hundred dollars, he resumed his seal, and Rev. Weld thanked the Klan through Mr. Chestnut.

NEW YORK, July 12. Four eminent men of science, specialists In

physical anthropology, came to the decision recently that Richard O. March, after months of perilous exploration in the malaria-ridden tropical jungles of Darien, had not brought hack to this country three members of a newly-discovered race, but merely three of the common garden variety of native South Ameri

can Indians who differ from their fellows only in being subjects of a new disease effecting pigmentation

and giving them their blond complexion. They are White Indians sure enough but not Albinos. The four anthropological experts, Drs. J. Harley Stamp of Morris Plains, N. J.; Truman Michelson of George Washington University, Cuthbert Christy of England, and Bruno Oetteking of the Museum of the American Indian, all agreed that the so-called White Indians were merely

copper-colored aborigines bleached

by some strange and unknown di

sease.

The learned decisions had little effect upon Marguerite, Alo and

Chepu, Mr. March's treasured wards from the tropics. They are having the time of their lives even if the

marvels of this city have dumfounded and bewildered them.

ANTI-PROHIBrnON 3

PETITION HAS GONE ASTRAY IN MISSOURI Head of Retail Liquor Dealers' Association "Can Not Account for It"

CALVIN COOLIDGE, JR., BURIED IN VERMONT

Claims 27,000 Signatures Were on List Agents Are Arrested

President's Son Is Laid Rest on Hillside Near Plymouth

at

U.JEWARNS AGAINST

'(ML SERVICE FAKES

Commission Gives Pointers to Persons Who Would Use - r Advertisled Courses

COMBINED MEETING OSTERBl'RG, Pa., July 12. Klansmen, Klanswomen and Juniors, representing the Osterburg, Claysburg, Bedford, Queen, Windber and Johnstown organizations, were the

RUFFIAN KICKS NEWSBOY

CONEMAUGH, Pa., July 12. Intolerance and cowardice were reflected in the actions of a Klan enemy here, when a big, powerful man

knocked a small newsboy, selling American newspapers, into the gutter, kicking him after he was down. The ruffian escaped before he could bo identified.

PLUNGES HEADLONG OVER EMBANKMENT

JOINT INITIATION BENNINGTON, Okla., July 12. A crowd, estimated at approximately 3,000, attended a Klan meeting near here last week. Between 700 and

800 automobiles were parked about the grounds. A large class of candidates was initiated, after which the Klanswomen initiated a group of candidates.

Motorist in Frenzy Hurtles Into Hudson River at Terrific ' Rate of Speed

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IS

YOUNG PEOPLE THANKFUL APPALACHIA, Va., July 12. Members of the Baptist Young Peoples' Union of Appalachia have published a Btatemept thanking the Ku Klux Klan for assistance rendered to the union at the play given in the high school, June 27.

TEXANS MEET ALICE, Texas, July 12. Bee County Klan No. 121 recently held

an open-air meeting on the grounds just acquired by the Klan. Several candidates were initiated previous to the business session, which was attended by jnore than 200 Klansmen.

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LAUDS KLAN WYAKO, Pa.. July 12. Rev. J. H,

Lilley, pastor of the United Brethren church of Wyano, delivered a sermon on the principles of the Ku Klux Klan, at McClaln'a Grove, Sunday, June '29, which was well re

ceived by his audience.

NEW YORK, July 12. Plunging

headlong to his fate in a runaway motorcar traveling at terrific speed down the embankment from Riverside Drive along West Ninety-sixth street, Manhattan, at 1:30 o'clock this morning, an. unidentified man sank to his death, a prisoner in his car when it hurdled the dock railing and sank forty feet to the Hudson river bed below. The accident was witnessed by two sailors attached to the U. S. destroyer Humphrey, now under repair at the Brooklyn Navy Yard, who were cruising about in a small naphtha launch. 4hile one of them, Frederick Glass, steered his small

craft to the spot whewf the accident

occurred, his companion, John H. Moran, Jumped overboard and swam to the pier just in time to see the body of the man rise to the surface and then sink before he could

reach it. Drives Honking in Frenzy

The loud honking by the frenzied

driver, as his runaway motorcar sped along with glaring headlights,

attracted the attention of pedestrians, who were unable to render any aid as the car whizzed by and made its death plunge.

. ST. LOUIS. Mo., July 14. John P.

P,ensa, president of the Retail Li-i quor Dealers' Association, ho had charge of the St. Louis campaign of

the Anti-Prohibition Society of Missouri to initiate laws repealing the

state prohibition statutes, was unable yesterday to explain why the

initiative petitions were not filed with the secretary of state by July 7, the last day for such filing.

"We sent petitions containing 27,-

000 signatures to the Kansas City office, for verification, on June 30,"

Pensa said. "I don't know what happened to them in Kansas City. It may be they obtained an extension of time for filing." When informed that no such extension had been granted or could

be granted legally, Pensa's only com

ment was: "I don't know how it happened they weren't filed. We sent ours to Kansas City when we were

requested to do so.' Frederick Parks, superintendent of the society,

handled the arrangements. Small Contribntions Here

"Most of the collections to finance

the society were made in Kansas and Jackson county," Pensa said, when asked how much money had been

ctmtributed by St. Louisans. "There were some small contributions here," he added, "but no one contributed any large amount. We retained a small percentage for oflice expenses and sent the rest to Kansas City." Pensa declined .to give details regarding the finances. Three agents of Parks, who were

arrested by police last January for

collections of funds for the society

said that only J2.81 of each $10 col

lected went to. the state headquar

ters. The agent retained the first $2.50 collected and 50 per cent of collections over that amount. The district representative retained 25

per cent or tne . amount turned in by the agent and the balance went to the Kansas City headquarters.

Prosecuting Attorney Schweitzer was unable to find a violation of law in

activities of the agtnts and no war

rants were issued.

PLYMOUTH, Vt., July 10. Calvin

Coolidge, Jr., 16-year-old son of the

president, was buried here late this afternoon in the family lot of the Plymouth cemetery. Mr, and Mrs. Coolidge and their

son, John, walked away from the grave with heads slightly bowed as a marine bugler sounded "Taps." A driving rain, which overtook the presidential train" on the way from Northampton, Mass., vanished before Ludlow was reached. The

funeral procession of automobiles more than a mile in length, wound its way under a blue sky between the tall green mountains to the cemetery on the slope of the hill.

There the president and Mrs.

Coolidge left their son near the president's birthplace, in the family

lot, close- by the resting place of

Mr. Coolidge's mother. The" grave,

under the shade of spruce and su

gar maple trees, is little distant from the farm of John Coolidge, father of the president, where young Calvin had spent many summer vacations. . - Drove to Cemetery The funeral party drove direct to the cemetery on the edge of Plymouth, from- Ludlow, where the special tram had carried them from Washington and Northampton. It was necessary for all to walk up the sloping hillside from near the road to the burial place. When

they had gathered there, the casket,

in the hands of the marines from the presidential yacht Mayflower,

was lowered. A mixed quartet sang softly "My Faith Looks Up to Thee."

missioner oi. Arkansas, u is. sua in

uie jumi warning, recently nas ut - $ vestigated correspondence schools of vi? V Xthis class and authorizes the Btate-'S "

mant- that ha haa iWntAnA&A that th-;" iivt.l

WASHINGTON, D. C, July 14. The United States Civil Service Commission and the national vigilance

committee of the Associated Adver

tising- CJubs of the World have- issued a joint warning-against misleading advertising of mas;' so-called civil service coaching schools. The following;p;oints are-emphasized: (1) No school of this kind has any connection -whatever with the civil service fforomission or with any

otner .orancn or the governments (2 JiJo school can give advance

information regarding examination

questions. "

(3) . No school can furnish civil service information-of value which

can not be ohtained. without cost fronvthe civil service commission at

Washington or its representative at thaposteffice;.pi.istom'baBeOiny

oi approximately s.&oo.cities; .

(4) No sehool can "guarantee"

appointment in the classified civil

service. Appointment can oe secured only through open competitive

examination under the civil service

rules. No school can cause a com

petitor to be certified for appoint

ment out of the regular order, as de

termined by his examination rating.

Many Applications

The civil service commission states that large numbers of applications for examination received at its office indicate that many civil service

schools accept as clients and take money from practically illiterate persons who could not possibly pass any kind of examination.

majority of them come as near be-f

ing "takes ' as the postal laws per

mit. The "schools" that Mr. McKin- A ley condemns are the ones that offer " to qualify persons for civil service:-" positions or make a professional man " of a laborer in a few weeks. ' Mr.W McKinley says that schools which T

prepare for civil service examlna tions rank second to detecavi '",,;

schools" in number. .. -

i

BEI5G FATHER

Being a father gives a iMB'i

splendid opportunity 'to serve -In a wonderful way. The Children of tO-"

day . are the citizens of tomoxrov.'

into, whose hands the weal ,&;43r tion'Tffill be placed. tj:iagrsav done their duty within the vatiioCt

their homes, we need not fear, IMS"

the future. Christian, men and

women come from - homes where i"

parents follow in the footsteps ofV Jesus. When the teachings of; the! - Christ have no definite place in thehome, it is.7diflicult.tgf-. insure-, taJiS. blessings; of Clirtstia.myKvfe tha home vhere'-the" elements f social adjustment and the .-essentials. -of character are established. Fath-"

look well to your parental oh-

i

boys and girls--

ligations as your

grow to adulthood, r I wish every father would read 1 and ponder the words of Daniel Webster : "If we work upon marble, it will perish: if we wor&ttpon' brass, time will efface it ; .-we rear temples, they will crum4ltr-tnto dust; hut if we work upon immortal minds, if we imbue them with principles, with the just fear of God, and love of our fellowmen, we engrave on those tablets something which will brighten to all eternity." By a Father?

o

POLICE WAIT FOR BANDITS' ARRIVAL

50,000 Names Needed When in St. Louis about June 15 Parks said that 40,000 signatures had been obtained. Approximately 50,000 are required to submit 4asvote an initiative proposal.'

The agents of Parks, when ques

tioned last January, said they cir

culated petitions for signatures and

solicited contributions at the same time. They found St. Louisans genenerally were willing to sign the petitions and said contributions of $1 were received frequently.

Youths Held Claim They Were

Looking for Concealed Whisky

GOOD COWS PAYING ILLINOIS FARMERS

CELEBRATIONS COMBINED WASHINGTON, Pa., July 12.

Klansmen held a big meeting here last week, combining a celebration of the national holiday with an initi

ation ceremony at the baseball grounds.

LIBRARY WINDOWS

Records Show Vast Difference in Returns From Cattle

A NEW PORCH Will make jronr home look kapdrrU per cent hcUcr. I'fcanr Ilarrlnon 303U EARL METZ Builder and Contractor

Through books we may look far away to other lands, see other peo

ple see windmills in Holland or

spotted leopards wandering in African jungles; see real things that are! Or we may look behind us through our book-windows and see real things that were and are no

more; things that happened before we were born or before Columbus was born. There is another book-window. This is the window into someone's mind; that book which tells of things which never were, or people who never lived! These people and lands existed only in someone's mind. He put them into his book.

j We read his book and we see them and behold that book is a window

between "his mind and ours. That is the magic of books. Take one up. It is just a collection of sheets of white paper covered with curious black marks white paper and printer's ink! Yet what magic in it! Is it any wonder that the first people who could read were sometimes called magicians? This white paper and black Ink may be

the means of -making you see something new, something you have never

thought of before; something fa-H

away or up high! This book leads your spirit to far horizons. Yes, books are windows! Come and look through them at the public library.

BENTON, 111., July 10. Good cows, wetir fed, are paying dividends in

southern Illinois, according to rec

ords kept on 347 cows during the year just past by the Franklin-Jef

ferson-Marion Cow Testing Association. A summary of the records

made by H. E. Jamison, assistant in

dairy extension at the University of Illinois, Urbana, shows that the 41 cows in the association which pro

duced more than 10,000 pounds of

milk during the year each returned -their owners an average of $217.55 over and above the cost of the feed

which they ate.

Poor cows, on the other hand

hardly pay enough for their owners

to break even on feed costs, $36. 03

according to the records. Forty

three cows in the association that made less than 4,000 pounds of milk

during the year showed a return of

only $36.03 each above feed costs.

Each of the 347 cows in the as

sociation returned an average of 6,611 pounds of milk and $114.72

above feed costs, giving 2,713 pounds

of butterfat during the year at an

average feed cost of $76.45.

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FINDS AN "INSTRUMENT"

WHEN RETURNING HOME

NEW HAMPTON, la., July 14.

When E. J. Feuliag. editor of the

tfew Hampton Tribune, returned

home from the Democratic conv.en

tlon at New York he found '4hat

Let's roll up the Klavern and quit,

hoy. A New Yorker by tne name of

Itrnntz Perscepnlcheehowskl says the

Klun principle is wrong.

It is reported that if Al Smith seeks another nomination that ' the

delegates will be given a two weeks'

training in a boiler factory immediately before the opening of the convention.

The length of the trunk in man is

more than one-third and less than

two-fifths of the height.

instrument of hell" had been or

ganized in his home county. This

quoted term Is Mr., rueimg s own

for the Klan. Needless to say, Mr

Fueling is a Knight .of Columbus

and this probably accounts for his

stand that taking the path of al

legiance to one's country .toakes one

"the worst enemy to our govern

ment." Mr. Fueling ; may, have

learned much at the New York con

vention, but tliere are stilt some, things which might be added' to his stock of information.

Cost of Ignorance

In Calcutta, India, eight hundred

telephones went out of commission with one stroke of the ax, as an ignorant coolie, making an excava

tion, mistook a telephone cable for the root of a tree.

The telephone lines, were imme

diately repaired, of course. It took the services of many skilled men

for many hours, patiently to sort

out the wires and match each with each. Meanwhile, eight hundred

telephone users went without the

easy intercommunication which the

telephone affords. What tragedies were thus caused will never be known. All that is reported is that in. one instance ignorance undid the

work of many hours, and that many more were required to repair the damage.

In the long run, ignorance never

wins over knowledge. But it is the

greatest weapon of ignorance that

it may strike swiftly and do much damage in a little time. One ignorant lawmaker may stop the wheels of progress for many

months; one ignorant school teacher may retard for years the develop

ment of the minds of fifty pupils; one ignorant action may undo the careful plans of philanthropy.

Had the coolie known what a tel

ephone cable was he would not have

cut through it. Did the ignorant teach

er know better he would not hurt

the little minds in his charge. Had

the ignorant lawmaker been educated or had another and wiser choice been made at election, nec

essary legislation would not have been blocked.

Education, knowledge, Informa

tion, power to understand, and once.

again, education, are our neeas. The children of today are the citizens of tomorrow. The knowledge

they gain today will be used in governing themselves tomorrow. Let us, all of us who claim some

small measure of wisdom as our nart of life's winnings, see to it

that the most precious gift of maa

to man. of father to child, or gov

ernment to citizen, be given in full

measure, pressed down and running over; let. us give our children the best of schools, the best of teachers, the best of knowledge, that when

they.- too. become men and women,

they be among those who repair I

the telephones, not tnose wno'cut communication.

ST. LOUIS, July 12.Two police

sergeants and four patrolmen were concealed Wednesday night in Zeller Bros. Catering Co., 4701 McPherson avenue, waiting for safe robbers. Four hours they waited, until, at 1:30 a. m., cramped and impatient and about ready to abandon their vigil, ' they heard a sound at the door. A night-shift baker, Frank Thatcher, opened the door and admitted two youths. . A few words passed and the baker . returned to his . ovens. The youths advanced to the office safe and one of them

kneeled and began to twirl the com

bination. A patrolman stumbled over a chair and the two youths

whirled around to face a battery of revolvers, and the command "Hands

up." Planned to Rob Safe,

At Newstead Avenue Station, the youths said they were Raymond Hendrix, 18 years old, of 4420 Evans

avenue, and Michael V. Thornton, 20, with no home, both former soda dispensers. Hendrix had formerly worked at the Zeller fountain, and

the police ambush was prepared because Thatcher had told his em

ployers that Hendrix had approached him with a plan to be ad

mitted so he could rob the safe.

Hendrix denied plotting with the

baker and declared he merely went

to the shop to retrieve a bottle of

whisky he had left under the safe when he quit. Once inside, the temptation to twirl the combination

dial was irresistible, he said.

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EX-PATROLMAN GETS ONE YEAR IN PRISON

Edward Shaughnessy, Charged With Impersonating OfiS- - cer to Borrow Money

ST. LOUIS, July 14. Edward

Shaughnessy, a former policeman,! must serve a year in the workhouse because he borrowed ?22 from acquaintances under the pre

tense that he was a policeman short of funds. He was tried yesterday

before Judge Calvin Miller on three counts of impersonating an officer,

and sentences totaling two years

and 30 days were imposed, but as Judge Miller ruled they-would run concurrently, the time to serve was

reduced to one year. Policemen testified Shaughnessy

was dismissed from the force

August 30, 1921, for intoxication, and in each of the loan cases it was testified that he secured the loans pleading sickness and promising to pay from his next pay check. For borrowing $2 from Robert E. Lee, manager of the Automobile Club ot Missouri, he was given 60 days; for borrowing $15 from W. T. Deacon of 5330 Pershing avenue, one year, and for borrowing $5 from H. S. Schnure, an automobile dealer, one year. Police officers testified that several other similar occurrences had -been reported.

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The automobiles- in daily? service

are worth more than twice as much as all the livestock in America of every kind and shape, that is & miraculous , showing for a- span of hardly twenty years " '

HOME RECEIVES GIFT . HARRISBURG, Pa. The Masonic Home at EMzabethown has received

a gift of $50,000 from George A.,

IKate and Mary, Gorgas. This gift,

which may be used for any purpose the trustees of the home approve, is a memorial to their brother, W. Luther Gorgas, who was at one time Grand, Master of Masons . of Penn-

EZRA MEEKER, 94, IS TO

RUN FOR LEGISLATURE

SEATTLE, Wash., July 14,-r-Ezra Meeker, 94 years old, : pioneer, "today announced be intended, to file as a

candidate for the State Legislature.

His purpose in seeking a seat In the House of Representatives, he said,

is to support the Naches Pass State

highway project and to oppose attempts to get an appropriation to

build a state highway through Chinook Pass. Meeker came west

through Naches Fas.

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