~ --1 he Sunday Bee: Omaha, September Z, l»Z-J------7*A Spirit of Prejudice Bred by Klan to Embitter Political Battles _ a __ ^lain Idea Opposition to Aliens Movement May Blow Up, Says Mark Sullivan, but Its Intol erance Will Leave Deep Scars on Public Mind. Called a Bad Influence My MARK SULLIVAN. It may not be agreeable to admit It, but If you are dealing with po litical realities it is necessary to take into account the fact that the Ku Klux Klan may be a. considerable factor in the presidential situation next year. At least either the Ku Klux Klan as such may be a political factor or the spirit animating the Klan Is likely to be. The Ku Klux Klan ns a country wide organization Is always in danger of blowing up. There Is an actuarial law which affects every organization of this kind favorably at the begin ning, but adversely after a time. So long as there is a country wide vir gin territory in which 10 sell member ships the agents are able to do very well. The Intricate system of asents, superintendents, district managers and so on apply their h gh-pressure business methods and the organiza tion expands very rapidly. But there always comes a time -when the terri tory is more or lesa saturated and there develops what people in tills line of business call "sales resist ance." At that point unless there has ^J»en the most expert actuarial wis l^^om and the most car ful conserving of financial resources there is danger of the agents dropping out and the whole system of driving salesmanship breaking up. Something like this has happened in the past to many organizations' formed on the same basis as the Ku Klux Klan, and experienced persons have learned to look for this kind of an end to the kind of organiznt.on that the Ku Klux Klan on a business side is. Something Back of It. But even If the Ku Klux Klan a;; an organization and as a business in stitution should blow up, there will still remain the spirit which animates it. Also many of the local groups might continue with undiminished vi tality. This brings us to tbs point where, merely for the sake of clearness, we ought to take a look at the Ku Klux Klan In a ststo of mind completely divorced from prejudice. It 1s a tact that some of the principle* of the Klan are utterly inconsistent with the theory of democratic government. It is a fact that some of its practices are as odious as possible. ,It is true that much—in fact, most—of what been said in condemnation of the W^Sn and its activities is entirely jus tified. Nevertheless, if we are going to be clear let us stop to inquire Just why it ts that so many people join the Klan. From the beginning there was a sit uation at the very heart of the high er organization of the Klan so bad that under ordinary circumstances the Institution could not possihly have lasted. That alone would have destroyed the Klan unless there had been somewhere in It, or in the ideas behind it, a good deal of vitality. Furthermore, the wide publicity it tending some of the specific outrages committed by local branches of the Klan would also have been enough to destroy the whole institution un less thera had been In it something that appeals to large numbers of per sons. From the beginning the Klan aas been under attack and criticism from newspapers, from the courts, from governors, legislatures and con gress. The fact that these attacks ha^e not destroyed the Klim must cause any clear minded person to pause a moment and seek to find out what is in the minds of those who Join the Klan that keeps It alive tn spite of the well justified attacks up on if. There must be some curious element of vitality In an Institution which persists In spite of so much ttjat is evil In itself and in spilo of eo many attacks upon It. histrust of Foreigners. One is justified in guessing that in broadest sense the spirit which beeps the Ku Klux Klin alive and growing is a widespread distrust of all things foreign—a suspicion that aliens and alien influences have pen etrated to a degree not wholly un derstood. but vaguely suspected, into places of power In the t'nited States. Tt Is not meant to assert that this suspicion Is true, tt is merely meant to say that the suspicion exists and that this suspicion accounts to J large degree foe the vitality of the Ku Klux Klan. One of the reasons for this wide spread suspicion and one of the prin cipal conditions that gave rise to the spread of the Klan was the cam naign of 1920. It is true that the Klan had been’ formed some five \ i »ars before. Rut. up to 1920 It had I nerely struggled along feebly In on* southern state, had acquired only nome 5,000 members and had con ern“d Itself wholly with the specific oca I southern problem of the negro. More nsrrowdy, the principal motive •or the local existence of the Klan II the south up to 1920 was the fact t,.it negro soldiers, having heen to ■Vance and having found there a lain of fieling about, the relations >• the races very different from wh.it • x.sts In America, returned to their oulhern homes indisposed to fall ,ack into the traditional social and political position Insisted upon by the •outhern white. It was under these ' circumstances that, the Klan got 'ts Jltt local Impetus In the south for Ida purpose of maintaining the old lolnl standards about the, relations * v*f the races. w If the Ku Klux Klan had heen con 'Ined to this activity It would n»xcr iav# got far beyond the aotith and aould not have become a political Victor of any consequence. miter I nderctirvenf. It was In 1920 or thereabouts th.it ilia kldri ceased to be a local organ I Omaha Masonic Lodges Presented With Historic 24-Hour-Made Aprons I i 7i—i 1 i i-1-- ■ ...... . - i . i i - ■ ' t-.vC. ml trom (he left is .Maj. Gen. .Mason M. Patrick, chief of the l’. 8. air service. Sixth from the left Is Gen. William Mitchell, assistant chief of the air service. Each Blue lodge of Masons In Omaha now has one of the Masonic aprons which figured In the Shrine convention In Washington, t>. C. last June. Two hales of cotton were trans ported hy airplane from Augusta, Ga„ to New Bedford, Mass., the cotton was spun Into thread, the thread woven Into cloth and the cloth was made into uprons and taken by air from New Bedford to Washington, all In the space of 24 hours. Last Tuesday night at a meeting of the Masters and Warders' club of the Masonic lodges of Greater Omaha Col. J. H. Parker, under direction from the War department, presented the aprons with appropriate cere monies. zation and got its impetus on a nation wide scale. This impetus, one may reasonably estimate, was associated with the nature of the 1920 campaign. That campaign revolved about the propcsal that America should Join the league of nations. Those who op posed the league fell into a mood where they were suspicious not only of the league, but of all things for eign. It was a mood that expressed itself frequently ns an isolated Amer icanism. It was a determination that America should stand aloof. Argu ments brought up for our refusing ‘O Join the league laid emphasis on the fundamental d fference between Amer ican ideals and the practices of other countries. It became almost a slogan, and it certainly was a part of the atmosphere, that America was in danger of losing its independent iden tity. Those who advocated our Join ing the league of nations were charged with having permitted international ism to overcome their native Ameri can patriotism. Out of all this grew a fear and a distrust of everything foreign, a sus picion that persons, some in Europe and some in America, were engaged in an effort to undermine our older Americanism. That campaign of 1920 on the part of the opponents of the league of nations was frequently savage and reckless. Those who mere ly read the metropolitan newspapers may not have known it. But some of the minor anti-league orators and organizers who went Into local com. munities were extremely unrestrained In the suspicion they cast upon the motives of those who favored our joining the league of nations. Built l pon Suspicion. It was out of this that there arose a widespread suspicion—a suspicion which was the stronger in proportion as it was vague—that America and Americanism were In danger . It was this suspicion which the promoters of the Ku Klux Kiuti exploited and built upon. Some of them did it for purely business reasons becuuse there was profit to them in the expansion of the membership of the league. Rome others did it for motives which, while Ill-informed or narrow, were entirely sincere. This is the thing which It is necessary to admit about the klan Jf wo are to deal with It In the spirit most likely to cure It. It is a fact beyond any doubt that In many of the small communities throughout tip south and w»st the local membership of the Ku Klux Klan includes some of the best men in the community. This fact ha* I, n recited to the writer again and again by persona whose Information and judgment arc not to be ques tinned. And this i« the fact about the klan which we must deal with in a spirit of tolerance. The chief In dictment against the klan Is that It Is Intolerant, that It promotes In tolerance, exploits intolerance Those of us who are against Intolerance, who are on the side of tolerance, rnuci consider the Idea of beginning by being tolerant about the klan It self, or at least of being tolerant to the extent of inquiring what are the honest motives of some men who join It. The best disinfectant of In tolerance is tolerance. Not neoes rarity and not at all tolerance of evil practice, hut rather a tolerant and open-minded spirit of inquiry to find out just what are the mistakes of Information and understanding which cause some honest men to become members and advocate of the klan If we are to offeet successfully an Institution which is really threatening to our American theory of govern ment it Is better to go about It. not with a club and not with a spirit of hate as great as that of the klan It self, but with a spirit of understand lng. Opposed |o Immigration. One of the concrete expression* of the spirit hack of the Ku Klux Klan Is opposition to Immigration. A great many Americana, many of them lead crs. many of them men of the highest und< ratandlng, have come In recent sears to believe that the amount of immigration we have hern receiving ha* been auch a* to create in many communities a balunce of power politically, economically and socially on the side of the alien. The thought ful person* who believe this have stated their belief so earnestly that throughout all America It hue come to be shared by large masses of peeo pU , The spirit of opposition (o Immlgra lion lias already expressed Itself |p a darstlr Immigration restriction law, the first genuinely restrictive law we e\er adopted No more popular meas ure ever passed congress than Ibis law. XX hen It > nrnn up In the sennl" It was passed by a vole of go to 2 and l lie two senator* who voted against it were men who, like Heed, of Missouri, tend to take the position of a small minority in such a way as to suggest an eccentric individual ity rather than a normal response to average public opinion. It is very rarely that any measure passes the United States senate by a vote whose proportions are as 30 to 1. Similarly, in the house the vote which carried the immigration restriction law w»* in the proportion of about 10 to 1. When any law passes through con gress by such a vote as this it must be accepted as expressing accurately a sincere and widespread state of public feeling. Perhaps it ought not to exist, but that fact is it does exist. Whether you believe in it or not. you must accept it. And since it must be accepted, it is best that it should be accepted in that sprit which is fundamental in American democracy, the spirit that the majority shall prevail. Prohibition Enters in. •Another aspect of the spirit which causes gome men entirely sincere to Join the Ku Klux Klan Is prohibition. Prohibition is an American institution. To European—botli Europeans in Europe and Europeans In America— prohibition is Incompi ehens.ble. Eu ropean newspapers and statesmen either laugh at it or express amaze ment at it. To the extent that our prohibition laws affect Europe they express the strongest resentment and complete determination to resist it. From this it follows that many Amer icans in those rural communities of the south and west which believe strongly in prohibition have come to think that all aliens are their enemies. They have come to believe that the Kuropean groups who ure suff clently large In certain American communl ties to more or less dominate them politically constitute the chief danger to prohibition. They see that the principal centers of opposition to prohibition are In those large cities where the alien population Is great enough to compose, a majority, or at least to have the balance of pow er. From this these older Americans who live In smaller towns and on the farms have come to think that the alien groups In the large cltic are a menace to prohibition and to other Indigenous American wavs and haniits of thought. Suspect Courts and legislatures. In connection with all this there ts one conimounly held prejudice which probably would not stand the test o( examination. It Is frequently said that most of the bootlegging, must of the successful evasion and opposition to prohibition, comes front aliens There are communities In the south and west where the chief cause for start Ing local branches of the Ku Klux Klan, and the chief reason why good rr*n join It. Is The determination to enforce prohibition. There are corn munitles where the courts and legis iat tires are under suspicion of not being wholehearted in their deter mlnatton to carry out. the letter of the law. and In such oommunlMe: the local Klan arise as an Institution for the extra legal enforcement of prohibition and for direct polities! r tlou In the shape of getting rid of public official* who fall to enforce the law to the satisfaction of the community. I am not sure that the charge that moat of the bootleggers are aliens would bear examination. In many of the cities doubtless it Is trur But It is only necessary to remember that one of the chief centers of opposition to prohibition and one of the chief sources of supply of Illicit liquor Is In communities which are more purelv Anglo-Saxon than anv other portion of America; namely, the mountain valleys of the south, which for genera Hons have been producers both of moonshine whisky end determined opponents of the regulatory laws of the federal government. This excer tlon, however, does not alter the fact of the existence of a widespread feel Ing that most of our illicit liquor comes from foreign countries and that most of the defiance of the law on s large scale la practiced either by for elgners or by those who maintain close relations with foreigners It Is hardly necessary to expand further on this. The fact Is that European aliens, both In Europe and In Amer ica, do not sympathize with the sttl tude of the majority of Americans about liquor, and this fact Is at tbs bottom of much of that anti alien spirit which is the biggest part of the I foundation of the Ku Klux Klan move ) ment. Tbs purposes of the Ku Klux K'nn In politics are pretentious. Some of them vlsualze It as sontelhlng like the Kaseigtl movement In Italv. which actually took possession of the gov ernment by force There Js nothing In this, of course There Is not much analogy between the Fascistl and the Ku Klux Klan except that the Klan has in a crude. Indefinite way the same spirit of extreme nationalism that the Fasclstl have. Moreover, the more apparent and less forblvable as pects of the klan, the proscription of specific groups of Americans be cause of race or religion. Is so repug nant to fundamental ways of Ameri can thought that the Ku Klux Klan can never possibly attain the power or vogue that the Fascist! movement aid. But, short of this, It maybe antici pated that In many local elections for the senate and lower house of congress the Klan will have a determining balance of power. In both the great rational convetlons a considerable body of the delegates will be men who will have the point of view of the klan In respect to principles and can didates within the scope of the klan's violent prejudices. Further than that. It can be taken for granted as surely as anything in future politics can be that there will be a further change in our immaglnatlon laws, and that that change will be in the direction of greater restriction. Admit all the room for honest dif ference of opinion, but the fact re maines that this country as a whole is In a strongly anti-alien mood. To fight that mood blindly, Instead of looking on it with tolerance, Is merely to Increase the Intensity of the prejudice. When the United States Chamber of Commerce asks that the immigration nuota be raised from 3 per cent to 5 It Is safe to guess that any particular newspaper clip pings relating to that will be pasted In the prospectives of the agents who are in the business of seeking mem berships in the Ku Klux Klan for siz able commissions. _ ^Copyright, lS28-> Unions to Hold Labor Day Picnic at City Parks Central Labor Llnion to Have Contests and Speaking at Krug Park—Carpenters at Elmwood. The Central Labor union will hold It* Labor day picnic Monday at Krug park, while the Carpenter'* union will have a separate affair at Elmwood. Both picnic* will be featured oy •port* and games. Vice President Nickerson of the International Association of Machin ists will deliver the principal address at Krug park. The committees In charge of the Central Labor unions outing are aa follows; General Committee—J. J. Kerrigan chairman; George Steiner, secretary. Harry Strosser, treasurer. Grounds—C. E. Clark, chairman: M. Courtney, Frank Mansell, A. T. Clark, G. A. Steiner, Joe Robinson, Zella Cottrell. Sports—Otto Niederweiser, chair man; Henry Bruening, Mrs. Charles Baker, Joe Robinson, William T O'Hearn, Mrs. J. M. Gibb, Zella Cot trell. Speakers—J. M. Gibb, chairman; George Norman. George Steiner. Printing—Monty Collins, chairman; Charles Rles, J. A. Lochray. Law arid Order—C. H. Wyckoff, chairman. The following contests have been arranged: Girls' shoe race: Age8 8 to 12. Shoes are mixed. Girls must find their own shoes, put them on and finish race. Prizes: $3. $2 and $1. Sack race, boys and girls: Age 8 to 12; 50 yards. Prizes: $3, 82 and $1. Boys’ race, 50 yards: Age, 8 to 12. Prizes: $3, $2 and $1. Boys’ race. 100 yards: Age, 12 to 16 Prizes: $3, $2 and $1. Ladies’ slipper kicking contest: Three valuable prizes to the three ladies kicking slippers farthest. Fat men's race: 50 yards, 200 pounds or over. Prizes: $3, 82 and $1 Men s race: 100 yards, free for all Prizes: $3, 12 and 1. Ladies' race: 50 yards, free for all; three valuable prizes. Fat ladles' race: 50 yards. 170 pounds or over. Three valuable prizes. Watermelon eating contest for chit dren under 16. Prizes: $3, 82 and 81 Blackberry pie eating contest for children under 16. Prizes: 83, 82 and 4t. Omaha man with paid-up union card, displaying most union labels on clothing a cash prize of 85 will oe given. The Grain Exchange, banks and local freight houses will close all day Labor day, while stores will close at 1 The Consolidated ticket offices in the Union Pacific building will close at noon Grocers and butchers will close at Id. Equal parts of vinegar and linseed oil applied to ink stains on wood with a soft cloth will effectually efface them. Sham Battle for G. A. R. Veterans at Encampment j Every Feature of Modern Warfare to Be Brought Into Aetion at Milwaukee. By Associated Press. Milwaukee, Sept, 1.—In sharp con trast to the now obsolete methods of warfare which remain so vividly in the rninds of tlie veterans of the Grand Army of the Republic, a hug and spectacular sham buttie. in which all of the modern implements of both land and naval warfare will be em ployed, is to be presented as one of the entertainment features nt the 5T:h annual encampment of the organiza tion here September 2-7. This will be the second time that Milwaukee has been so honored for many veterans still recall the good times they had in this city 34 years ago. Nearly 20,000 of the veterans visited Des Moines during the 1022 j encampment. A minimum of 35.000 persons wil' attend the encampment, according >o James H Williamson, executive secre tary, in charge of arrangements The local committee, however, had made preparations to house 50.000 persons during the week, every available ac commodation In the city being util ized. The colored population of the j city has arranged ih/mugh the Urban j league to entertain the colored vetei-l ans. The sham battle will he staged in the natural amphitheater on the Lake Mich gan front. Participating tn It will be a contingent from the Great Lakes naval training station, with .their hydroplanes, bombing planes subchasers, and other modern naval paraphernalia; several detachments from the I’nlted States army and a large force of Wisconsin guardsmen | Daily Prayer 1 Let ua offer the sacrifice of pratie to God.—Heb. J 3 ;t 8 As the morning breaks gently upon us, O Lord, awakening ua to con sciousnt ss and opening our eyes to the light and labor of ea li new day before the blood-sprinkled mercy seat we bow. Here w-e would leave out sins, and loose and lose our weights and llnd and cherish the full, assur ance of Thy favor. May Thy face be unobscured to us today Give u grace to set our affections where Christ sitteth, that so we may be saved from all sordidness of thought, or word, or deed, and that our lives may draw their inspirations from high and holy springs. Help us to cherish a tender regard for all the rhlldrtn of God of everv name. Our eyes are unto Thee. O God Our hearts would find repose in th< assurance of our acceptance in the Beloved. We would yield our mem hers as Instruments of righteousness unto Thee, that, by the gracious power of Thy Spirit we may ourselves this day grow in grace and knowl edge and. by our ministry vo others In Christ's name, brine some into an experience of His abounding grace. Hear us. O Lord, because we pray in that sweet Name in which all Thy exceeding great and precious prom Ises are sure. Amen. REV. THOMAS T SHIELDS. Toronto, Ontario, Canada. These coal bulletin* are being published to better acquaint you with the detail* of the Retail Coal Situation in Omaha. Watch for them Froir> Seventy to Seventy-Two Per Cent of ihe Mine Price of a Ton of Coal Goes to Pay Mine Wages If coal did not have to be mined, but could be hoisted into freight cars without other labor, there would be a decided saving to the consumer. And if the freight “charge” did not more than equal the combined costs of coal and mine labor, again there would be a decided saving to all Omaha coal consumers. But, remember—Omaha’s coal supply all comes from far away points; that 70 to 72 °o of the mine price of a ton of coal goes to pay mine wages and that it is sold in Omaha on a smaller margin of retail profit than in other cities. Ask your coal man to explain coal costs—he will he glad to tell you about mine prices, freight charges, delivery costs and the many other items which go to make up the retail price on your favorite fuel, because he wants you to know every angle of the retail coal business. THE ASSOCIATED RETAILERS O/ OMAHA