IPWPJIIWP JvaajMiill II IIIHIRWWMPMMI ft -,. V i . Vf 'V . t ,.; :& ki frl &y iOUf mm ) MI Am Hi fflWMtS'EMPEROR' EULOGIZES DISORDER AftD feiil MAGISTRATES RAP Ink.' AAiniT Ar TUP ll ll r-JflKIIUMIItMUA Ministers and Others Join in t Praiso of Evoning Publio Ledger for Expos & l&OTRY IS DENOUNCED Honest Courage of Expose Praised by Business Men To thu Editor ot Kutnlnp Public I.ei'qrr: Sir It nlwnyn was a known fnct thnt the mnrnltiR Pcm.tc T-Knonn utood for Juaticr tirnl rWitpmiMiem, and It teem thnt Its ofNiirins, the Evieino Pi'nuc Lepokr, is fol lowing tlie footsteps of tlie fnther publication. At n mcotlnc of the South Street Buitnesi Men' Association, held Thursday, September 15, It wns I'lnnnlmoitsl.r revived thnt n vote of thanks be extended to your vnlun ble paper for It honest eonrnce and conviction In cxponltiK the Ku Kl'ix Kln, n ronglomerntlon of hoodlum' (and swindlers masquerading ns "patriotic Amerlrans." IIoplnB that you may carry on the food work of exposing the so-railed "True Americans." II. M. LEVY. President. S. VRAM. Vice President. A. CROWN. Second Vice Pre. I. GOTTI.On. Treasurer. M. AIVTnNBERO. Klnnn. Sec. EDW. A. CINICOVK, Rec. See. .Condemnation of the Ku Klux Klnn and appreciation of the expose of the KlBn In ho EVEXTWO PfnUO IiEPOEtl were exnressed todav bv clercvmen nnd Tarious members of the minor Judiciary. ,fnte Rov. Charles II. Todd, Second Baptist Church of Oermantown "I think the Evexixo Prni.io Lr.nonn is doing a very wise thing In presenting an xp"Ae of an organisation such as thf Ku Klux Klnn. It is deplorable thnt anch nn organization as this exists in our country, and it should be wiped out. I am heart and soul with this investigation, and the more complete the exposure, the better the country itfll be." Tho Rev. Arthur C. Baldwin. For tieth Street Uaptist Church "I have "read with Interest the Klan nrticles In tie Evejuhq Pubmo Ledoeii, and aota with satisfaction each day the further exposures of these people who are members of and call themselves the Ku Klux Klan. To slip Into the ver nacular, they might well bo termed a 'bunch of boobs.' " The Rev. Roger S. Forbes, German town Cnltnrlnu Church: "As a repre sentative of liberal Christlnnlty 1 am opposed to anything of the sort of the Ku Klux Klnn. I commend highly the Evejh.no Public Ledoeu's policy of exposing this movement." Magistrate Ma v well Stevenson "The Ku Klux Klnn Is an officious organiza tion nnd is radical to nn extreme. Any aoclcty or organization which holds Kaelf aloof from the law and takes the tand that the Ku Klux Klan uoes ahould bo watched closely." Magistrate Benjamfii V. Kensliaw xae nu mux Klan (not incorporated), organized after the Civil Wnr. to my mind is In no way affiliated witli this new Ku Klux Klan. Inc. The new Klu Klux is a different proposition. On the face of It. it Is n money-making cheme. Five hundred thousand members nt $10 toe hend nets the leaders $5,000,000. This money Is put to some unknown cause. "The United States has no plnce for an organization of this character. 1 am now sitting on a bench ns magis trate to uphold tlie Constitution and I propose to do it." Magistrate Atkinson Costelio "It is tune that this great country of ours atamp out bigotry. Any person who bo longs to an organization that Is bigoted agalnflt a man because he differs in reliciou or race is not a flt man to mix ith the public. "I think the Evknino Punuo Ij:doeji is doing n public service when It presents an expose of sucii an organt aatjon." Magistrate John A. Dougherty "I eon't believe such nn organization has any place. We have in this country a body of men who are duly elected to make the laws. At least the majority of the people of the country seem to be desirous of obeying these laws peace ably. "Therefore, I do not see how any elf-constltuted organization like tne Ku Klux Klan can dare to take on itself the right to set up new laws ot its own. We have no place for an Em peror in a country where we have a President. We were under the rule of a King in days gone by, but our people fejt the Impulse to rule themselves, and decided they could do better without royalty. "In the course of 150 years since we declared our independence, this country has advanced so far, in contrnst with ihe progress made by the empires and ingdoms of the world, that it seems to me the soundness of their judgment In setting up a democratic form of govern ment is more than vindicated. j "My opinion in this matter is not founded on my religious belief. I be lieve that any man created by God should advance himself as far in this world as fossible, and that no man either above im or below him should dare to hinder him, regardless of race or creed " Councilman Joseph I Gaffney "If tills organization thnt is called the Ku Klux Klnn has nnj thing like .'.00,000 roemoers inrougnout tne country, tho JCVEJIINO I'l'llMC LEDGER has fmleerl 0n.wc" ln Printing tho exposure. Z "TlwiPn la vir.,1, l.. I . ., attell)ntH to exillolt lllvntrv nnd ,nl .. ' "nuns nrw iiuuui inese jico for money or po'itical profit. It Is an unloe)y and paradoxical aspect of American history. "Everj bensibio man, if he Is also qoncsi niid a oeuever in frcertom, is op- lAal in thu TiTu 11., v l.'L I .. 1.1 ' rejoice to see it put out of business. It ytould be the same no matter whut creed or class such an organization ought to attack, provided that the class 67 creed held no principles that were contrary to the Constitution." DIFFERENTIAL HEAmNG SET Rates to East and South Will Be I Discussed 5 The transportation bureau of the Chamber of Commerce announces that a shearing on the Philadelphia differen tial, Involving a revision of rates be k Jween Eastern territory and Virginia ciuei, win uu nriu ui mo j.iuitij street, itjRoom 401, New York, on Thursday i 4mt 30:15 A. M daylight-saving time. I i The meeting lins been called by the Trunk Line Association for the pur- ' tiose of gathering Information on the I 'aim of Hits city for rate allowances and from points South. I NEW ORGANIZATION .K.K. 6000 "Knights of Road" Seek to Stamp Out Bigotry. Order Is Growing BRANCH IN PHILADELPHIA Steeat Dttpntch to Evening PubUo Ledger Covlructon, Ky Sept. 20. Orgnnl zntlon of "the KnlRhts of the Road." n secret order with 0000 members In ten cities for the express purpose of ilsht ItifT the Ku Klux Klnn, was announced jesterdny by Jeff Davis, of Cincinnati, known the country over as "Kins of the Hoboes." He lias been chosen "Chief Dispatch er," title of the national head of the new organization. Lodges hnve alrendy been orgnnlzcd, Davis said, In Cov ington. Newport, Louisville. Ky., ami in Cincinnati nnd other Ohio cities. The largest chapter has been formed In New York City, he said, n thousand members having been recruited quietK He said that, due to the necessity of the organization having to fight the Ku Kiux, working, secretly, only his name would be made public ns an official. Davis snld that, besides chapters mentioned above, locals have been formed In Philadelphia, Chlengo, Cleve land, Haltimore. San Francisco nnd Diwtnn and Ilnmilton, O., all with 100 to S0O members. Dais said the "Knights" Intend to fight propngamlnjigainst Jews, Catho lics or members of any other religious eet. to effectively qunsh any attempt to pave the way for a religious wnr In the fritted States, to combat the Ku Klux Klnn or any other organization thnt may follow In its footstep nnd to pre vent America's hlghwajv being blocked by "bunk, bomb or bums." Davis asserted that 500 of the or Bimteatjon members are women and thnt all rnces and creeds will be nd mitted. Women organirers nre to be nnpolntrd over the country. Davis says the papers for the Knights' Incorpora tion will be tiled tomorrow at Colum bus, O. TO TEACH KLANCRAFT University to Inculcate "Ideals and Principles of Ku Kluxlsm" Atlanta, Sept. 20. Announcement has been made that the Ku Klux Klan within the next rear will erect at Ln- ntcr f nlverslty n building to be known an "The Hnll of the Invisibles," which will be devoted to the teaching of Klan (raft. This structure, it is stated, will be operated sepnrntely from the univer sity. Tnfs stntcment wns mnao D General Nathan Bedford Forrest. grandson of the founder of the original Klan and business manager of the uni erity. "Tills new building will be devoted to instructions in the idenls nnd the principles of Ku Kluxlsm." Genernl Forrest nnnounced. Details of the courses to be pursued will be made public nt a later date. Announcement was made nlso thnt forty-five acres adjoining the univer sity hnve been bought for $50,000, giv ing n total of fifty ncres for the col lege site. One million is to be spent in improvements, it is announced. Dr. Edward James, dean of Lanier University, sets for the alms of the Institution as follows: "The need for tlie teachings of the principle i of American citizenship ns set forth in the American Constitu tion and the Declaration of Independ ence will be met by maintaining classes for careful htudv and nppllcu tion of these indispensable mntters." Ku Klux Forced to Disobey Law ContlnaM from Pan One (ountry wur frequently extended, nnd If declined the consequences were likely to be serious.' Commenting on this phase of the Ku Klux movement, its historians, Lester nnd Wilson say: "The order contained within itself, by reason of the methods practiced, sources of weakness. The devices nnd disguises by whicli the Klnn deceived outsiders enabled all who were so dis posed to practice deception on tho Klan itself. "It placed In the hands of its own members the facllltv to do deeds of violence for the gratification of personnl feeling, and have them credited to the Klan. To evl'ly disjwjsod men, member ship in the Klnn wns nn inducement to wrong doing. It presented to nil men n dnngcrous t'Tnptntion which It required n ronsidernble mornl robust ness to resist. Many did not with stand it." Transformed from n burlesque mvs tery to n swret bodv of mnskod regula tors, the Ku Klux Klnn, nt n convention held in Nashville. Tcnn , in Mnv, 1MVT. revised nnd nmended its "Prescript," or constitution, perfected prupngntlon plans for extending itself throughout the South, nnd chose General Nathan B. Forrest, the Confederate cavalry leader, as itR supreme ruler, with the title of grand wizard. Forrest brought tho membership up eventually to fi30,000, and by exercise of all his own prestigu and masterful power of control, and with the assist anco of numerous other prominent for mer Confederate officers, did everything he could to keep it in control and han dle the serious situation which had de veloped nn reconstruction proceeded Among these aides were Generals John 11 Gordon, A 11 Colquitt, (J. T An derson, A It Law-ton. W. J Hardee John C Brown, George W. Gordon and Alhrf Plko. vi lm wn plilef 4ii,!l..ll officer, and later become one of the , ir i -. . . .. loremoic .Masonic autnormes in tuc country. Disbanded by Forrest After less than two jears, In late February, 1809, General Forrest gave Ku Klux Used Trickery to Frighten Negroes The "rubber bag" trick was one of the mentis ued by members of the original Ku Klux Klnn to spread terror among the Negroes of the South after the Civil War. A hooded nnd sheeted horseman would ride to n Negro's cnbin nnd demand a drink of water. The night rider would pour tlie water into a huge rubber bag conceuled ln his gown. He then would demand a bucket of water, nnd while the ter rified Negro would watch the fluid apparently disappear down the "White Cap's" throat the rider would rrinnrk It was tho first drink he had since he was "killed at the battle of SJilloh." NEMESIS OF K A WAR-LIKE LOOKING 'EMPEROR' AND B 4sL&autvi.9!BBflJ 4(fli HaHasHBHaaaHsjajaTavjaBHBjaajBaBjaMHsja7wa-""i---"'aaM IHKSUWftlSAj PBKh''' miaW ' SBBBBBBBBBBBKsBBBBBl22tBBBBBHL'AtS. IBTHfEPMHBhSaMIJ 'fttBsYtHPtHav1 asBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBnBBBBBBBYXHw-$&BBBBBBBBBa LHwESaBVrYiVriBHBI WtKSSSffhfWi U4t la'aaW SRHjflKtVH lil Ez9H DsBRSsCslBBaBWjElRIBBBH UpMBBBaHsHiHIBnBBBtBBHBBtBBl BnBBflBBVBBMsV'BBSHlBqBBBBBBakuSi ' BbIbBBBH KKlMjiy JWDrBsy: ' WHRaKdtTr73B LlsfllBBWOBBBBBBBlBBsMBlHH WBKM jBQiaawttsaaiaiHflK "' LrfSMti' IH itTBrff- isaMaWTllaaaBWasT!win ' IBSaLH IHMBBBBW'vaBVHBHraBH 9AS9bJbVbbbbbbbHbbHH BBH kVatBlBSBlBHBBBBH!'3'BnBBBVIt0lBV PjVfMBUBlBBBBBBBSBBBVBBIBBHHI BtBBBH BBaSnBHBlBH-CsBBBIMHBl BbSMb1BBBBB1BBb1bBBBB BBBBH bwbbbbPbbbbbbbBbsv c BBBBBMflBaBvSasai Sf4S?niaBaBBBBaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaisaaaBaaaaaaaaBV BVBBBaBaBl BBBBfRsBHaBBF'BBBBBBnBH SSSSKwKBKBIBBi BH BKBfJBBBBvHpBvBBBR BBBBaaflaiVBSaBB iXtfTrJjYnKffFWKtKjSKSSMmBMKt PzRBHikjjaBaaaaaBu.BTBBBSpasBBBBj . .. , js -jt4 yy. jyfcyyjg .jrtVftA-aLqtyyStJtt i,tajHiaBBaBBj jfiBKEHP-flHHaBiBaBBM i "" J Tho military' appearing gentleman is not a member of tho A. E. F. but "Colonel" William Joseph Simmons, "Kmpcror" of tho Ku Klux Klnn, sunning himself, Ills trusty sword nnd Ills uniform ns n "colonel" of tho uniformed division of tho Woodmen of tho World. The "crest" is thnt decorating the flagpole nt the entrance of tlie $25,000 homo pre sented to tho "Emperor" by his devoted followers 50,000 WEEKLY TINKLES INTO STRONG BOX OF KU KLUX LEADERS A BOUT $50,000 n week tinkles into tho coffers of the Ku Klux Klan and -- the pockets of its IClenglcs, King Klenglcs, Grand Goblins and tho oven hlghcr-ups. This revenue Is from membership "donations" alone. Every new Klans man must cross the mystic palm with $10 worth of real money. Other largo 6ums come from side-lines of tho order. Since its creation ln 1015, the Ku Klux Klnn has grown from a member ship of thirty-four charter members to n membership of 500,000. Its leaders assert thnt 5000 recruits nre being added to thnt number weekly. This growth hns been coincident with the Klnn propngntors' spread of racial nnd religious hatred. All the "knights" of tho Klnn nre bound by blood-oath to fealty to the "Emperor." The Evejjino Ptdlio Ledger began presenting the inner secrets of the order Monday, September l'J. Governors, Stntc Legislatures nnd tho Mayors of cities arc aroused against the Klan, and now realize the mennco It holds for tho life of America. up the taBk, nnd as Grand Wizard of ficially proclaimed the Ku Klux Klan and the Invisible Empire "disbanded nnd dissolved forever," nt the same time ordering the destruction of nil its property and records of every sort. This action wns tnken partly because the Legislature of Tenncssco had pawed n law making association with the Ku Klux Klan punishable by n line of 5500 nnd imprisonment for not less than five years ; partly because he felt It hnd accomplished all that it usefully could of its mission of regulation, and partly becauso, for tho reasons cited nboe from Lester Johnson, it was a physical impossibility to control the acts of In dividual "Dens," or members of u wholly secret, masked and terroristic organization. This proclamation ended tho second or organized period of Ku Kluxlsm in the South. But a large number of "dens," paying no attention to For rest's order, kept up independent work till the lute '70s. The "Pale Faces," "Constitutional V n 1 o n Guards," " White Brotherhood," " W h i t e League," "Knights of the White Ca mella" and other participants ln the Ku Klux movement, though not In the Ku Klux name, alto continued tho work for soveral years, nnd units of the original Klan are believed in many Hi stances to have merged into these others. Congress Forced to Act Ku Kluxlsm occupied the attention of Congress in 1870 nnd 1871, when the Enforcement Act, or so-called Ku Klux law, wab passed, giving tho Fed eral courts authority ln Ku Klux cases. In 1S72 President Hayes issued an antl Ku Klux proclamation and backed it by the urm), while committees of Congress made investigations In all sectlous of tho South Even then it. wns n long time dsini: out. and In the files of news papers are c Ipplngs of the '80s nnd '00s reporting cafes of whitccapplng, night riding and all the varieties of masked terrorism used either to satisfy personal to nsnrn tho functions o to usurp the functionsot s, as "Ku Klux outrages. dislikes or t peace officer Ku Kiuxlng and Ku Kluxlsm nan made for themselves a place in tne lun gunge to describe briefly an nttltude and an activity w men appeared ursi in wie South lu tho Ku Klux movement nnu has remained peculiar to this country. Lynchlngs Laid to Klan Tho report of the lnvestigatfon or dered by Congress in South Carolina when tho Ku Klux' law was in de bate said : "In the nine counties covered by tho investigation, for a period of approx imate y six months, tho Ku Klux Klan lynched nnd murdered thirty-five men, whipped "0'J men and womon, other wise outraged, shot, mutilated, burned out, etc. 101 persons." Jnmes G. Blaine, defeated candidate for the presidency in n fnmous election, wrote of the Klnn ln Louisiana : "These Klnns and organizations hes itated at no cruelty, were deterred bj no considerations of law or humanity They rode by night, were disguised with masks, were armed ns freebooters Tliej whipped, mnnned or murdered tho vic tims of their wrath. Over -000 per sons were killed, wounded nnd other wis,, maimed in Louisiana within a few weeks of the presidential election in !b0S." Scored by Own Lawyer Ilewdy Johnson, of Maryland, staunch sumiorter of the Confederate I cause, bitter opponent in Congress of the Fourteenth Amendment nnu tlio l(e construction Act, was retained as a lawyer to defend members of the Ku Klux Klan on trial before the United States Court in South Carolina. After henring the evidence, much of It confeH slons by tlie Klansmen, he denounced the Ku Klux Klan thus: "I have listened with unmixed hor ror to some of tho testimony that hns been brought before you. Tho outrages proved are shocking to humanity; they admit of neither excuse nor Justifica tion ; they violate every obligation which law and nnture impose upon man ; they show thnt the parties cngnged were brutes. Insensible to the obligations of humanity and of religion." Called Injury' to South In summing up his speech, already quoted, before the Texas Bar Associa tion Attorney General Gregory said: "From the nlghtmnre of reconbtruc tlon nnd Ku Kluxlsm two things have been born whicli have wrought incal culable injury to tho South and may continue to do so for a century to come. One of these Is the 'Solid South' and hi nthpp Is 'eontemut of law.' "The vicious, unconstitutional laws and our defiance of them left the Soutb with no nroner reSDect for Constltu- flnnnl nllthnrltv. with a dlSOOSltlOn tO right our wrongs and n contempt for all law not to our liking. This last is our crowning inheritance of woe for which our children and our children a children will suffer. "The Ku Klux machine has been stored away in the Battle Abbey of the Nation as obsolete, we trust, as the causes which produced It; it will stand there for nil time ns n reminder of how useless is tho prostitution of law In an effort to do that which is essentially unlawful, but It will also remain an eternal suggestion to the vlgilunco committee nnd the regula tor." Along Como Simmons "Emperor" Simmons, of Atlanta, was not content to let the Ku Klux machine stay "stored away." Ah ho says In liis own words, quoted at the begin ning of this urtifle, ho was ambitious to revive not only tho body of the dead Ku Klux Klan, "disbanded nnd dls Mjived forever" by its own supreme authotlty, but nlso "the Ku Klux spirit." How thoroughly he hns succeeded Is shown by tho enses of outrage nnd defiance of lnw nnd secret terrorism ' sct ort1' ln tliese coh"8 .terdny. AQn Jh , R , ,., K K, ? Las rear;(1 ,t oi80noU8 'HCnU pgain In Texas, Floridu, Alnbnmn, Georgia, North Carolina and Missis- sppli t0 glve ony imrtlai HBt of lo calities. And as the paid propngntors of the Ku Klux Klan, Inc., sprend the in corporated order into other Stntes nnd sections Ku Kluxlsm may be expected io spread along with it. For Ku Klux, Inn . though it may succeed in clcarlm itself of legal guilt, ln many Instances lias inevitably carried with it wherever It has gone nn "inheritance of woo" the Ku Klux spirit of "contempt for H $3:H ROUND tbipM Wit lu 870 AddUlonil FROM PHILADELPHIA (Reduced Karen From All Btatlons) TO ALLERTOWH FAIR September 19 to 24 Automobile and Horse Racing, etc. RI'KCIAL TOAIV WMINKNIIAY AND THUnSDAY ! Bi1lni Tennlnll S.S0 A. U. h (Sttndird Time), 9.30 A. U, (Dij-Urht h Time), itepplnr at Columblt Ate,, H Kuntlnrdun Bt., Wtjne Junction, jtiKiniown ana jutniaue, u x CONSULT AOENTB DEC ILItm M - PUIl Anni PHIA A RP.AniNP. H RAILWAY pTiKI"1llryrTyirJ umn inirataaMwv rrTTTTTl u Wlllllf DEFIANCE HIS PRIVATE CREST law" nnd lnck of respect for "consti tuted authority." ZToto the Klan is striving to Mnp Into the "Invisible Empire" chiefs of police, sheriffs, proscouting attorneys and other laxo-enforcement officials will be shown tomorrow. "Emperor" Bini' mons alleges that even members of Congress have taken the oath of al legiance to him, Cocvrtoht. lilt, bv PtibMe Ltdoer Company and the Viet) Publhhlno Comvanv (the .Veto Vorfc IVorldJ. Gompers Attacks Ku Klux Menace Continued from rose One thing, and resentment rises hot against it. "The record ns it has been Inid hare calls for the extinction of tho Ku Klux Klan. The force of public opinion Bhould be sufficient to bring about this result. "Any such organization ns tho Ku Klux Klan has been shown to be is certain to use every devico to increase its power, and that means thnt wc nre confronted by an autocratic power thnt will grow unless it is destroyed. Its cunning in striving first to enlist the Judges and polico officials where new organizations arc sought Is nmplo proof cf this. "The Ku Klux Klan la a mercenary, autocratic organization. Its claim "to being n secret organization is largely uijtli. Its most "secret" documents nre copyrighted for business reasons and are therefore accessible to who ever wishes to see them. The whole dangerous scheme has been worked out to ensnare the credulous and to get the monoy. "Every democratic force in our coun try, including tho trade union move ment, has bomething to fear from an organization pledged to an autocratic concept, working under the concealment of musks and under cover of night to carry out tho decrees of those who have no authority to either define or execute punishments. There is no essential difference between mob rule and Ku Klux rule, and labor Is the foe of both." Outrages Laid to K. K. K. in Last Eleven Months Killings , 4 Irreparable mutilation 1 Branding with ncid 1 Floggings 41 Tnr-nnd-feather parties 27 Kldnapings 6 Persons warned to leave town or otherwise threatened 43 Communities threatened by posters or advertisements 14 Parades of masked Klansmen displaying 'warning placards.. 15 Total 102 Princess Pat For Well-Drfed Comfort The secret is in the poise of the heel and in the straight inside line. Harper's 1022 CHESTNUT OF f HE t AW U. S. FLIERS ESCAPE BAIT OF KU KLUX Klan'8 Plan to Got Airmen Into Knights of tho Air Is Frustrated MEN0HER DECLINES HONOR Washington, Sopt. 20. Officials nnd officers of tho Army Air Service in general are giving fervent thanks thnt they did not fall into a trap set for them by Colonol William Joseph Sim mons, "Imperial wizard" nnd "em peror" of tho "Invisible Empire," and Major C. Anderson Wright, then king kleagle and chief of staff, Invisible Planet, Knights of tho Air. Tho trap was cleverly baited several months ago before tho truth "with re gard to the Ku Klux Klan wns known. Major Wright was then, interested ln the air publication Tall Spin. He communicated with tho nlr service hero requesting a copy of its organization' plnns. Tho communication, of course said nothing about tho Ku Klux, but a good deal about tho Knights of the Air. Inasmuch ns there was nothing se cret nbout the organization tables of tho Army Air Scrvlco, a copy was sent. Air Service officials naturally were disposed to encourage any le gitimate enterprise thnt promised to promote aviation. But some air of mystery about the communication from Atlanta caused suspicion. Therefore, when tho powers that be in Atlanta proposed to make Major General Chnrles T. Menohcr a high potentate of the order, he promptly declined tho honor. To oome officers it also seemed ob vious an effort would bo mado to in veigle flyers into the Knights of the Air. Air Service officials wanted to know that the scheme was absolutely on the square and free from even the taint of commercialism, not to mention the deeper nnd vnstly more serious potentialities. For example, there was n feeling that possibly Major Wright, who wns not then known to be a King Kleagle or anything else in tho Ku Klux, might be seeking merely to use the Army Air Service oh n medium to boost the cir culation of the publication in which he was interested. A suspicion developed n llttlo Inter, after General Mcnoher had been offered an honorary position ln connection with tlie Knights of the Air, that Colonel Simmons was seeking to establish a direct connection with the Air Service in order to use it to boost bis now thoroughly discredited organization. A serious crusade against tho Ku Klux Klan is taking shape here. Mem bers of Congress, American Federation of Labor leaders and many distin guished individuals nre interested. Orphans to Be Quests at Club Circus Tho children from the St. Vincent's Homo, in Lnnsdowne nnd the Wnlling ford Orphanago, will bo guests of the Keystone Automobile Club, ot the circus to be held by tho club at Palmers Cor ners, Wnlllngford, Frldny nftcrnoon. Proceeds from tho circus will go townrd tbo rebuilding of a stretch of the Provi dence road. iimmwi: Plants roses In children's cheeks Victor Bread 6 Big Loaf At all our Stores g Black & Brown Kid $8.50 & $9 1228 MARKET Wabver Shops WAITRESSES Maids Laundresses All kinds of domestic help can be bad through an ad in THE PUBLIC LEDGER MORNING EVENING SUNDAY r Milk that is clean, pure, fresh that is laboratory-tested, pasteurized and the daily use of which is real health-insurance. There's a de pendable quality to Abbotts "A" Milk it is tho same high quality today as it was yesterday, and will be tomorrow. Phone Ub to Deliver a Dottle Tomorrow Daring oeos ABBOTTS ALDERNEY DAIRIES, Inc. 31ST AND CHESTNUT- DOTH PHONES Atlantic Citg WUdwood Plcatantvillc Ocean City !L John E. Stevenson Deserves Your Support as Candidate for Municipal Court Judge Dorn in Philadelphia, Studied law in the ojJioeB of his father, the late Judge Maxwell Stevenson. Admitted to the Philkdelphia Dor October 6, 1911, Hob specialised in Municipal Court practice since that Court viae established. Eminently fitted by training and exptru ence to serve on the Municipal Court Dench. Your active support and your vote will be greatly appreciated. His Name Appears on the Republican and Democratic Ballots VOTE TODAY FOR JOHN E. STEVENSON! School Days Special "Reflex" Gas Light Plenty of illumination for studying, reading, sewing all from the one light. For a limited time we are offer ing the Wclsbach Reflex Gas Light as shown in the cut, complete with mantle, glass cylinder and shade, ready to give perfect lighting serv ice, at a substantial reduction. Price, $2.45. Call at any of our offices and get one or more of these lights before this sale ends. The United Gas OLD ROOFS CAN BE SAVED! Free Roof Inspection, September 20th Men responsible for the upkeep of factory and other large buildings are hereby notified that we will make free roof inspections today, September 20, and for a period of thirty days. Your roof inspection will include examination of copings, walls, flashings, chimneys, ventilators, skylights, manholes and the roofs themselves. A full report will be given showing all conditions just as found, together with recommendations for repairs where they are shown to be necessary, and suggestions for care of the roofs, tanks, stacks, boilers, sprinkler and ventilator systems. The inspection puts you under no obligation to employ our repair service, or to purchase our repair materials. It will pay you to have this expert free inspec tion now. It gets the matter attended to, lets you know definitely (before it may be too late) just what condition your roofs are in. You may need no painting done. You may have a roof that could be saved by immediate action. THE SOONER YOU KNOW IT THE BETTER See or phone us for this free inspection. Jnmicmi PjfiiUiiTliiBiitwai't'iriTirrrrc CAREY PRODUCTS ROBERTS AVENUE AND STOKLF.Y STREET PHILADELPHIA ,e-s -jam MILK QMk. A representative will call upon request. Improvement Co. grnron $2-45 fax a M'-r-m it 'it f 4'L tv Av ? vmJri I ( I J MM f' ! T EXCLUSIVE DISTRIBUTORS OF ll f tf9 t I .n '. , L&.'tfVC y itj iASW- ittfWo