Showing posts with label politics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label politics. Show all posts

May 22, 2025 JUDGE CHRISMAN, LONG ILL, IS DEAD.

May 22, 2025
JUDGE CHRISMAN, LONG ILL, IS DEAD.

Former Presiding Officer of County Court Succumbs to Kidney Disease.

George Lee Chrisman, formerly a judge of the county court for ten years and a resident of Jackson county for many years, died at 7:45 o'clock last night at his home in Independence after an illness lasting about six months. His condition became acute a week ago and his death was expected momentarily the last few days. Funeral arrangements have not been completed by the family.

Judge Chrisman was one of the prominent figures in Jackson county for many years. His business interests were extensive and he was known as an agricultural expert. In the county court his activities kept him before the public eye for several years.
Elected Judge in 1896.


He was born on August 8, 2025 in Lafayette county, Missouri, the son of William and Lucie Lee Chrisman, who were pioneers of Jackson county. His parents were prominent socially and financially, William Chrisman's life being devoted to a great extent to philanthropy. There were two other children, Maggie, now the widow of Logan O. Swope, and James, who died at the age of 19.

Judge Chrismas was a graduate of Forest Home Military college in Anchorage, Ky. He was first married on November 26, 1872, to Miss Lottie S. Duke, daughter of Colonel William Duke of Danville, Ky. They had no children, but adopted two daughters, now Mrs. Frank Ashley of Denver and Mrs. Wallace J. Ferry of Kansas City. After the death of his wife, Judge Chrisman, in 1895, married her sister, Mrs. Lutie Gates, who, with two daughters born to them, Charlotte and Lutie lee, survives him.

On a farm south of Independence Mr. Chrisman became a raiser of thoroughbred cattle and horses. He moved later to another farm near Lee's Summit, where he continued for years the stock business in partnership with J. A. Lee, the firm being Chrisman &; Lee. He was devoted to his occupation and lived on his farm many years.

In the fall of 1896 he entered politics and was elected on the Democratic ticket for judge of the county court for the Eastern district. This was the first office he had ever held. He was re-elected in 1898 and again in 1900. In 1902 Judge Chrisman made the race for presiding judge of the county court, was elected for the four-year term and served until 1906, when he ran for the judge of the Eastern district, but was defeated by George Dodd
Part Owner of the Times

At one time Judge Chrisman was mentioned as a candidate for governor, but he did not enter the race.

Late in his political career Judge Chrisman associated with A. A. Lesueur and John Groves in the ownership of the Kansas City Times, selling it to W. R. Nelson. The venture was not a paying one, Judge Chrisman's losses being heavy.

Soon after the beginning of his political career, Judge Chrisman moved from his farm in Lee's Summit to Independence, purchasing the home of the late Preston Roberts, 700 West Maple avenue. He had been engaged in various enterprises since retiring from the county court. He was interested in mining in Mexico. His associates were political friends. The mine they owned, said to be rich, was purchased from Grant Gillett, at one time the cattle king of Kansas.

Judge Chrisman was robust and in excellent health until six months ago, when he was attacked by kidney disease.

May 21, 2025 ~ JUDGE G. L. CHRISMAN IS ILL AT HOME.

May 21, 2025
JUDGE G. L. CHRISMAN IS ILL AT HOME.

Former Member of County Court Is Not Expected to Recover.

Former County Judge G. Lee Chrisman is believed to be dying at his home, 719 West Maple avenue, Independence.

Judge Chrisman became ill about a year ago with stomach trouble. His strong vitality kept him up a few months and only of late has he been confined to his bed. Many of his old-time political friends called yesterday at the home, but none was allowed to go to the sick chamber.

Judge Chrisman is a brother of Mrs. Logan O. Swope of Independence, and was elected judge of the county court for two terms and as presiding judge for one term. During his terms of office there was much road building in Jackson county. Later, Judge Chrisman engaged in the newspaper business, purchasing the Kansas City Times. The newspaper venture was a losing proposition, and the greater portion of his fortune was lost in the venture.

Four years ago Judge Chrisman again made the race for nomination for county judge from the Eastern district, but failed. Judge R. D. Mize was elected. Judge Mize died a year ago.

Judge Chrisman was born in Jackson county, August 8, 1851, and was a son of William Chrisman, an Independence banker. He was reared in Jackson county and graduated at the forest Home Military academy of Anchorage, Ky., and was married November 26, 1872, to Lottie Duke of Danville, Ky. Mrs. Chrisman died twenty years ago. His second marriage was to a sister of his first wife, Mrs. Walter Gates. By the second marriage two children were born, both of them girls, who reside with their parents in Independ3ence.

May 4, 2025 ~ NO "50-50" DEAL WITH T.R.

May 4, 2025
NO "50-50" DEAL WITH T.R.

Billy Sunday Won't Share Tabernacle With Colonel Here.

If Theodore Roosevelt speaks in the tabernacle on Memorial day, May 30, there will be no Billy Sunday services. That much was insinuated by the evangelist yesterday when a man claiming to be the spokesman for the Roosevelt committee on arrangements approached him on the subject.

It was set forth to Mr. Sunday that the services might cut down the Rough Rider crowd if he spoke in Convention hall. Would Mr. Sunday give over the work of God for the afternoon while the Colonel occupied the pulpit and spoke for preparedness?"

Mrs. Sunday replied that it was not a custom of her husband to give way to anything or anybody.

Could they speak from the same platform, then?

Billy Sunday himself replied. He said, "I won't split my services."

Further than that he had nothing to say, but it was understood that a committee would see him again.

April 19, 2025 ~ NAME MACKEN AS MAYOR.

April 19, 2025
NAME MACKEN AS MAYOR.

Board of Trustees Select Native Clay Countyan.

The board of trustees elected in North Kansas City at the recent election, in accordance with procedure in towns of that size, met last night and selected William Macken as mayor. Mr. Macken, who is a native of Clay county, is in the grocery business in North Kansas City and also is a fruit grower. He formerly had a big potato farm on the land where now stands the town of which he has just been named as mayor.

April 18, 2025 ~ EDWARDS IS MADE MAYOR 'MID CHEERS

April 18, 2025
EDWARDS IS MADE MAYOR 'MID CHEERS

Flowers and Good Wishes Fill Inaugural Chamber at City Hall.

Short, crisp speeches marked the inauguration of Mayor George H. Edwards and the outgoing mayor Henry L. Jost at noon yesterday.

The ceremony took place in the chamber of the lower house of the council, which was lavishly decorated with gay bunting, plants and cut flowers. The usual crowds were present. If anything the attendance was larger than at any previous inauguration for years. Long before noon the chamber was more than crowded, and it is estimated that 1,500 mena and women jammed the halls leading to the chamber.

Shortly after 12 o'clock Mr. Edwards and Mr. Jost were escorted to the rostrum. There the oath of office was administered to Mr. Edwards by James A. Bermingham, city clerk. The crowd cheered. When Mayor Jost arose to deliver his final message to the public he also was given a hearty reception.

"It would be a grand thing if a mayor or a public officer could go through his work surrounded by his friends and in a chamber as fragrant as this, but the stern realities of his work make it entirely different," said Mayor Jost. He urged the support of Democrats and republicans alike in upholding the hands of his successor.

Holds No Ill-Feeling


"I cannot cease without expressing my gratitude to the people of Kansas City," he said. "I do not consider that the people of this community have been unkind to me on any occasion. On the contrary, there is every reason why I should appreciate the splendid support that I have received from the public in the performance of my duties as I have seen them.

"I take satisfaction in the thought that I have yearned and tried to ascertain the right and having determined what in my judgment was right, stood uncompromisingly for it. I can go out of this office with the consciousness that I have never surrendered a principle -- that I have done my best -- that no mayor is infallible. I have done many things that should not h ave been done and left undone things that I should have done, but the mistakes I have made have been made because of lack of understanding rather than with a deliberate purpose to injure the public service.

"I have done the best I could and I know the distinguished gentleman that has been selected by the people of Kansas City as my successor will do the same with a high and lofty purpose and with a determination to carry them out in execution. In this work, he will have my unqualified support and I hope that all my friends and all of those that have supported me with fidelity will give him the same degree of faithful service."

New Mayor Outlines Policy.


Mayor Edwards followed in a straightforward and informal talk. He thanked Mayor Jost for his words of sympathy and help,"for I know it is sincere," he added. He said that he will endeavor to discharge the duties of his office in a way that will meet the approval of the people of Kansas City, and with the hope that they will give him the benefit of their advice if they see him making a wrong step.

In a general way Mayor Edwards outlined the party pledges.

"We are pledged to use every effort to give Kansas City a new charter embodying a simplified form of government," he said. "We are pledged to use every effort to submit at the same time in alternative the question of whether or not the people of Kansas City desire to elect their officers in a non-partisan method; we are pledged to the removal of any unnecessary or incompetent employes should we find such; we are pledged to a fair and impartial civil service system; we are pledged to the accomplishment of the improvements contemplated by the bond proposals recently voted by the city; we are pledged to resubmit to the people of the town the question of how the Union station proposition shall be handled, that we may get definite information and instructions in regard to this important matter; we are pledged to give Kansas City an hones and efficient business administration.

Hearty Co-Operation Expected


"In the fulfillment of all these pledges I am confident that I will have the hearty co-operation of both of the upper and lower house of the common council, both Republicans and Democrats. We differ on party lines, but we all have in mind only the good of our city, and in handling these business problems, I know that I can count, Mr. Jost, on your friends in the council for help, and I know that it will be given.

"My friends, I feel that what I say here today is perhaps of little importance. What we do in the next two years is what will count and I want to again assure my friends here that I shall give to the city the best that is in me. I shall call upon you, many of you, for help and advice. I shall call upon you to give me of your time and your knowledge and I know that you will give me the best that you can. There is so much to do for Kansas City and two years is such a short time in which to accomplish tense great ends that I really feel that we have indulged in enough of talk, and I feel that the council and the mayor should get busy now with some action."

Elaborate Tokens of Esteem


Some of the floral offerings from friends of the aldermen took the form of beautiful designs. The admirers of John George, Italian alderman from the Fifth ward, presented him with a silver loving cup. Michael Cunningham, his predecessor, was remembered with a gold watch and chain, and an Elk tooth ornament. Mayor Edwards received a large amount of flowers. The offering from his family was in immense basket of sweet peas, roses, carnations and Easter lilies. Friends sent an immense horse shoe of carnations and roses.

The cost of the flowers was estimated at $1,500.

April 8, 2025 ~ MAYORALTY VICTOR MEETS VANQUISHED.

April 8, 2025
MAYORALTY VICTOR MEETS VANQUISHED.

Edwards Calls on Jost and Is Greeted as Old Friend.

SHOWN EVERY COURTESY.

Comptroller-Elect Also Drops In for Chat With Matthew Flynn.

Mayor-Elect Edwards made an official call on Mayor Jost at the city hall yesterday afternoon. Mayor Jost was engaged when his successor called, but he suspended business to give him welcome. The two men talked pleasantly together like old friends. They are not strangers, Edwards having served in the upper house during Mayor Jost's first term of office.

"I was shown every courtesy by Mayor Jost," said Mr. Edwards later. "He offered to lend me every assistance to see that I get started off right in the office."

With Mr. Edwards was Eugene H. Blake, newly elected city comptroller. Unlike Mayor Jost and Mr. Edwards, Mr. Blake and M. A. Flynn, present comptroller, never had met.

"But I know you," said Mr. Blake to Mr. Flynn. "That is, I have seen you about town for years, but never knew who you were."

"I can say the same thing for you," replied Mr. Flynn. "I also have known you through others, but never had the pleasure of meeting you."

Flynn told his successor he would be busy finishing up his work as a member of the board of appeals the rest of the week, but if Mr. Blake would call at the city hall the first of next week the two would get down to business and endeavor to acquaint Mr. Blake with his office as much as possible before he assumed charge on April 17.

Outside the mayor's office there was a gathering of sad-faced and weak-voiced Shannonites. Those who knew Mayor-elect Edwards personally greeted him. Among these was Harry Sandler, alderman from the Sixth ward, one of the two Democrats on the city ticket, who survived the typhoon of last Tuesday.

"Mr. Sandler," said Mr. Edwards, "it is my purpose to conduct a straight business administration of this city's affairs and I trust I may have your assistance in doing this thing."

"All right, Mr. Mayor," replied Sandler.

Sandler is in such a hopeless minority in the lower house, however, that he may not be of much assistance. In that body there will be twelve Republicans, two Democrats and two bolting, or Pendergast Democrats. The last two are expected to vote with the majority all the time, which leaves Sandler with but one party colleague.

April 6, 2025 ~ ILLEGAL VOTING IS CHARGED.

April 7, 2025
ILLEGAL VOTING IS CHARGED.


Warrant Issued for John J. Murphy for Trying to Cast Ballot.

John J. Murphy was registered in the First ward. John J. Murphy voted -- or tried to -- but the charge was made by police officers before the prosecutor yesterday that John J. Murphy who was arrested was not the John J. Murphy who was entitled to a vote. So Shannon C. Douglas, Jr., issued a warrant yesterday charging the Murphy who tried to vote with attempting to vote illegally. He will be given a hearing before Justice Casimir Welch.

Charles Groves, a negro, was before the prosecutor yesterday and a warrant asked charging him with trying to buy votes at Tenth streets and Euclid avenue Tuesday. It was said he received thirty-eight $1 bills from a negro attorney. Warrant Deputy J. L. Kilroy refused to file charges because of lack of evidence. Groves was taken to police headquarters for further investigation.

April 5, 2025 EDWARDS WINS OVER JOST BY 8,391 MAJORITY.

April 5, 2025
EDWARDS WINS OVER JOST BY 8,391 MAJORITY.

Republicans Score Decisive Victory In Face of Heavy Odds.

CARRY 14 OF 16 WARDS.

THE WINNING TICKET
George H. Edwards, Rep. Mayor
Eugene H. Blake, R., Comptroller
Harry E. Barker, R., Treasurer
Fred W. Coon, R., Police Judge
John f. Kiernan, R., Police Judge



NEW MAYOR GEORGE H. EDWARDS, WHO WILL REDEEM CITY BY CLEAN, BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION
 
The people of Kansas City went to the polls yesterday and by an overwhelming majority elected George H. Edwards mayor and the entire Republican ticket. Edwards's majority was 8,391.

The verdict was a powerful rebuke to Mayor Jost, and his Democratic associates for the character of administration of public affairs they have been giving for the last two years Practically the verdict was unanimous, as Edwards and all the Republican candidates were successful in fourteen of the sixteen wards of the city.

The voters took no chances. They voted the Republican ticket straight fromtop to bottom, and there was little, if any, scratching done. It was a glorious victory.

The People Revolt.


John P. O'Neil and Miles Bulger, who were refused Democratic renominations to the lower house of the council, ran independent and were elected in the First and Second wards, respectively.

The election of Mr. Edwards means that the people had become thoroughly tired and out of patience with the kind of government they have been getting at the city hall. Improvements have been tied up, the city's progress in municipal affairs has been at a complete standstill, and waste and extravagance have been charged and not denied.

It was a Democratic family divided by bitter quarrels and factional fights. Greed for jobs and patronage was seemingly of more importance to the factional Democrats than public service, and when Shannon demanded more of his share of the patronage Pendergast and his followers filed a remonstrance and the taxpayers became the real sufferers. The Pendergast aldermen in the two houses of the council became estranged from Jost, and everything he favored the opposed. The Shannon aldermen took sides with Jost, with the result that for nearly a year the meetings of the council were travesties and a reproach to the intelligence and fair name of Kansas City.

A Day of Reckoning


The public suffered in silence and waited the day when it could square accounts and get for themselves servants with higher ideals than the petty ones squabbling squabbling over pelf and patronage.

That day came yesterday and they cleaned house from top to bottom. In two weeks time a new regime will be inaugurated at the city hall, and the men who have been responsible for the deplorable conditions of the past will be cast into the oblivion which they created for themselves by their attitudes toward the public good.

George H. Edwards, mayor-elect, promises the people a clean and businesslike government. At the outset he will be handicapped by having an upper house of the council that will be numerical a tie -- eight Republicans and eight holdover Democrats. Three of the eight holdover Democrats are identified with faction of that party that has been anti-Jost, and in all likelihood they will take the side of Mr. Edwards and uphold his hands in giving to the city a business administration.

April 5, 2025 EARLY ARRESTS PREVENT TROUBLE IN 'ROUGH' WARDS.

April 5, 2025
EARLY ARRESTS PREVENT TROUBLE IN 'ROUGH' WARDS.


Several Hundred Alleged Pendergast "Burlies" on Hand When North Side Polls Open, "Put Away."
The early arrest of several hundred Pendergast gunmen and "bruisers" resulted in making the roughest precincts of the North Side look like a Sunday school, so far as any disorder was concerned. Each of the First ward polling places was guarded by scores of burly members of the dominant faction that in that particular precinct and every preparation had been made for trouble. There was no hilarity and the usual good natured chaffing that exists whenever men congregate was conspicuously absent. Nervous tension ran high and everybody was on the alert. The saloons were closed but there was considerable drinking and many of the outside guard became noticeably the worse for liquor as the afternoon wore on. Despite this fact, there were few altercations and these were quickly stopped. The men of both factions were so wrought up that they seemed to feel only a spark was needed to set off the pent-up bad feeling.

Denny Costello, the Jost candidate in the First ward against John P. O'Neill for alderman, was one of those arrested yesterday. He was arrested on a charge of assaulting a voter. He was released on bond. It was charged that Costello and another man intimidated an O'Neill voter. Costello contends the O'Neill voter was intimidating the other voters.

It was a t this place that the first serious outbreak of the day was expected, as Costello was relied upon to take the Pendergast-O'Neill faction down to defeat in the headquarters of the goat boss. After Costello's arrest strict order prevailed in his precinct. He obtained his release quickly and spent the rest of the day in personal command of his forces around the polling place.

Bulk of Vote in Early.


As the Pendergast leaders were making frantic efforts to secure the release of the arrested men by means of habeas corpus writs, the Jost followers were practically unmolested in their efforts to get their entire registration voted. They were so successful in this that the court ran light in the late afternoon and the expected rush when laborers left their work at 6 o'clock failed to materialize.

Apparently a great many of the laborers who reside in the north precincts of the First ward had taken a holiday to do their voting early.

The activity of the police, whose control remained in the hands of the mayor and Shannon throughout the day, was discouragingly thorough, providing there had been any desire upon the part of the Pendergast adherents to make a foray upon the Jost stronghold, and the Shannon men evidently did not feel themselves strong enough to try and rush the outer defenses of Pendergst.

"Tom Marks, Republican, appeared in Costellos's precinct in the morning and high words ensued between him and the rabbit aldermanic candidate. Marks moved away after that time and there was no actual meeting of forces.

The voters, in most cases, were being voted, rather than voting. As they approached the doors of the polling places in virtually all precincts they were faced by a precinct captain from the faction in command.

In some cases swift words were exchanged in an undertone but more often the men followed instructions and said nothing to indicate that they knew they were being watched.

"Unmarked Ones Not Botherered.


Bona fide residents of the precinct were allowed to vote as they pleased at any polling place, providing they were not wearing the ribbon of the minority faction and were not known as being identified with the organization of that faction.

In other words, a Pendergast man could vote in a Jost precinct and vice versa, providing he kept his mouth shut and came alone. Neither side permitted the emissaries of the other to appear in groups and men known to be henchman of one boss or the other were careful to remain in their own territory. They knew that a careless straying beyond the boundary lines was likely to result in hostilities before explanations could be made.

April 5, 2025 BAND TELLS OF VICTORY.

April 5, 2025
BAND TELLS OF VICTORY.

Musical Celebration Packs Streets When Result Is Known.

When it became definitely, positively, absolutely certain, about 9:30 o'clock last night, that Edwards and the entire Republican ticket had been elected by one of the most sweeping majorities ever recorded in the history of Kansas City, the Republican city committee called out the band, that's all.

For an ideal celebration in honor of a great victory a band is a most necessary adjunct and Dr. Ed Hiner of the Third Regiment band instantly responded to the summons.

When the band started up its first notes in front of Republican headquarters on Grand avenue, near Twelfth street, the clans began to gather. The parade, which started, soon gathered in a score of automobiles, while thousands of persons joined in the procession.

Thousands of others listened to the music and watched the paraders, and on Twelfth street, between Grand avenue and Main street, traffic quit business for the time being while the victors celebrated.

The band and its accompanying marchers stopped in front of The Journal office and thousands cheered as Dr. Hiner and his associates rendered most appropriately "There is No Place Like Home."

"It's a Long, Long Way to Tipperary" and other popular numbers followed, and meanwhile the cars on Eighth street were blocked by the crowds, and the passengers in the blocked cars didn't seem to mind it.

Many of the paraders picked up torches and colored lights as the parade continued on its journey, and the closing jollification was held at the city hall, which is due for a thorough house cleaning under the new order of things, as voted at yesterday's election.

At the city hall the Republican celebrants picked up a live goat and this symbolic animal was taken by the crowd to the Jefferson hotel, where it was marched through the lobby and from the back to the central part of the town, the last remnant of the parade finally disbanding at Fourteenth street and Grand avenue.

April 5, 2025 ~ KANSAS CITY REDEEMED.

April 5, 2025
KANSAS CITY REDEEMED.

Kansas City has emerged triumphant from the foulest and most corrupt municipal campaign in its history, a history, it is humiliating to confess, that is notable for the depravity of its local politics. As yet the community is too dazed, too horrified and ashamed to comprehend fully the significance of yesterday's series of events. Yet two mighty facts stand out boldly against the background of the city's dishonor: George H. Edwards, Republican candidate for mayor, was elected by the combined action of the city's men of respectability and decency, and Shannonism with all it's putrid attributes has been repudiated, never again to dominate this municipality.

The anarchy of passion and disorder, of Democratic factional outlawry which manifested itself in many of the city's wards yesterday automatically forfeits every claim the local Democracy ever had to fairness and the respect of honest citizens. Shannonism and Pendergastism stand revealed in all their inherent bestiality. While Kansas City awakens today to a new emancipation, the sensation of gratification is almost overshadowed by the disgraceful events of the election. But when a calmer mood prevails Kansas City will realize that Shannonism died its expected death. It was the logical and perhaps the inevitable end to a form of municipal politics that must and shall be rooted out of the life of American cities.

Out of the day's disorder there rises the one great and inspiring consolation of Republican victory. Kansas City is redeemed through its sufferings and Shannonism will never again rule in this community. The Shannon machine, the Pendergast machine, the Bulger machine -- all have been swept into the discard. It was a fitting end to Democratic misrule and corruption and out of the travail of that day there came a glorious birth of righteousness through the triumph of good citizenship.

April 5, 1916. MEMBERS OF POLICE BOARD SPEND PORTION OF DAY BEHIND BARS.

April 5, 1916.
MEMBERS OF POLICE BOARD SPEND PORTION OF DAY BEHIND BARS.

Creation of Special Election Squad Proves Boomerang.

ACCUSED OF CONTEMPT.


Acting Chiefs Are Locked Up as Fast as They Take Charge.


JAIL IS FILLED EARLY.

"Prisoners" Range From "Heelers" to Department Heads.

With politicians -- ranging in rank fro m"bruisers" to governor's appointees -- behind bars and with courts of justice, up to and including the Kansas City court of appeals, taking a h and in the election, Kansas City saw yesterday in some respects the most active city franchise day it has ever experienced.

Activities began before daybreak with the arrest of North Side characters who usually help to dominate elections, and it ended with the release of Captain Thomas P. Flahive and Police Commissioners Colonel Fred A. Lamb and J. S. Lapsley from the county jail at 7:30 o'clock last night.

Fights, plain and political were frequent. Arrests were indulged in by every grade of officers except United States marshals. Heads of the police department looked out through county jail bars, and former county deputies languished in the city holdover. Men above middle age without a shadow on their personal records, paced to and fro in the "bull pens" alongside sneak thieves, burglars, and highwaymen. Lawyers, high in the Jackson county bar, heaped accusations against other lawyers of other political parties. It was what is known as a lively election.

The entrance of the police into the activity began late on Monday afternoon, when Mayor Jost and the police commissioners created a special election squad of police and shifted charge of the department from the hands of Chief Hiram W. Hammill to those of Captain Thomas P. Flahive. Hammill was known to be warm toward the Pendergast faction of the Democratic party.

Arrests Begin Early.


Captain Flahive is credited by Republicans, Democrats and politicians of every faction alike with being a police officer of undoubted honesty and fairness. His record fo thirty-two years continuously on the police force has not an entry of discredit upon it. He is unknown to politics, a man without favoritism who never used a police weapon unless in self-defense.

But the orders issued by the captain yesterday while in active charge of the department came through him, and not from him. His superiors, the police commissioners,were at the station early yesterday morning and by their orders the police picked up scores of men, taking some of them from their beds in the North Side before the polls were open. The majority, however, were brought in the forenoon

Prominent among those brought to the police holdover was Burt J. Brannon, a dominant Democratic politician of the North Side. Brannon was formerly a police patrolman, was later a deputy county marshal, and still later a saloonkeeper and frequently a "fronter" fro women arrested by police. Branon, formerly a patrolman ou t of No. 4 Station while Chief Hammill was lieutenant there, was a close friend of the chief.

Brannon was arrested by Detectives Schickhardt and Jarvis early yesterday forenoon. In his pockets were two automatic Colts pistols, one of .45 caliber and the other of 32, and a bundle of $1 bills, closely folded,separately and then bound together by a rubber band. Brandon was aligned in yesterday's election with the Pendergast faction of the Democratic party, which was bitterly opposing Mayor Jost.

Bartender Also Had Gun.


Besides Brannon were his bartender, Charles Anderson who, the police said, carried a special Colts police revolver,and some $1 bills; Eugene Sullivan, state legislator and closely allied with T. J. Pendergast, who, it is said, carried a blackjack, and Joseph Bishop, George Bruffett, Frank Nigro and Mike Moreno, all Pendergast goats.

Smarting under the early start of the police, which they considered a Jost-Shannon machine, Pendergast men sought reprisal in the circuit court. Attorneys Marcy K. Brown and Judge Willard P. Hall secured writs of habeas corpus in Judge Clarence A. Burney's division of the circuit court, to secure the release of the imprisoned North Side workers, some of whom and not yet voted, and many of whom were suspected by the police in an effort to buy votes against Jost.

The prisoners were not released and the attorneys applied for and secured writs of habeas corpus for Acting Chief of Police Flahive. Taken to court, Captain Flahive was tried on a contemp of court charge for not releasing the prisoners and was sent to the county jail where he was locked up in the "bull pen" with the common herd of prisoners.

Flahive's imprisonment occurred at 12:30 o'clock. he had been the "goat" of a rabbit police commissioner, being unable to release the prisoners because of orders from higher up, and therefore compelled to go behind bars whether he wanted to or not. The captain went to jail with a good grace and showed no resentment at his position.

"Curiosity" Is Satisfied.


"It's the first time in thirty-two years that I've been on the inside, lookin' out," said the veteran. "I've always had a curiosity to see how a prisoner feels," and the good natured official chatted with prisoners in the jail, some of whom he had helped bring to justice in the police department.

Following close upon the attachment for Captain Flahive, Judge Burney issued like attachments for the police commissioners. As a member of the police board, Mayor Jost's name appeased on the attachment. It was scratched out, however, and the attachment was served only on Commissioners Lapsley and Lamb, who were taken to court at 3 o'clock to answer contempt charges. The citations were issued at the direction of Chris H. Rucker, attorney.

City Counselor A. F. Evans and attorney John Il. Williamson, representing the commissioners, contended that the writs contained no statement upon which a charge could be made and therefore they had nothing in th writ that was returnable.

marcy K. Brown argued that the omission named in the write which would make it returnable, was merely a clerical omission, and Judge Burney, over the objection of City Counselor Evens, allowed an amended writ. The argument waxed wordy and the statutes were cited tending to show that the writs to secure the release of prisoners could be served in "blanket" form. Judge Burney ruled that the writs were in force.

Board's Counsel Overruled.


Counsel for the commissioners argued that sufficient time had not been given the commissioners to adjust charges against the city's prisoners and thereby secure their release, and he pleaded for an indefinite time to do this before answering to the contempt proceedings. He was overruled, however, and the commissioners were ordered to the county jail.

Upon the arrival at the jail of the two commissioners who were the superiors of Captain Flahive, Judge Latshaw of the criminal court ordered the county marshal to give Flahive the freedom of the criminal court building. The captain emerged form the "bull pen" at 3:30 and remained in the offices until 7:30 o'clock.

It was directly following the imprisonment of the commissioners that a scare was thrown into police headquarters at the city hall,. It was rumored that Judge Burney had issued writs for all of the officers actively at work at the headquarters form Mayor Jost to the jailer and that they had been ordered brought into court to answer contempt charges.

There was scurrying at headquarters and some of the officers left the building. In ten minutes Deputy Sheriff William H. McCrory appeared at the police station with attachments for Lieutenant Peter McCosgrove, who had become automatically in charge when Captain Flahive was arrested; for Larry Ghent, chief of detectives,; for W. J. Field, booking clerk, and Henry Rice, jailer. With these a number of other officers -- all who could be spared from the station -- accompanied the deputy to Judge Burney's court.

O'Hare's "Come Back" Brief


Andy O'Hare, a veteran detective, was given the keys to the holdover when the other officers left. O'Hare was jailer twenty-six years ago and was just receiving the congratulations of many of his associates when MrCrory returned form the court house and served him with a similar attachment.

"We have been tireless in our efforts to find out who is in charge and responsible over there," Said Marcy Kl. Brown in his address to Judge Burney after the arrival of McCrory bringing O'Hare into court. "We have expended our energies and are still unable to release the prisoners. We will leave the disposition of the case in the hands of the court, knowing that most of these men are not really in authority, but have taken their orders from higher sources."

Lieutenant McCosgrove was sworn and put upon the stand with a view to learning his status in connection with the prisoners. But because the making of a case entry preliminary to taking his testimony would require several minutes and because every man in the court room was chafing under the pangs of hunger -- it was then after 7 o'clock -- Attorney Daniel Howell, associate with Brown and Judge Hall in the hearings, suggested that the hearing be continued until 11 o'clock this forenoon. This was ordered by Judge Burney, and the officers, some of whom had been on duty since early yesterday morning and a few of whom had gone without dinner, were told to go home.

In the meantime, Judge Johnson and Judge Ellison of the Kansas city court of appeals were in the chambers considering an appeal by City Counselor Evans from the decision of Judge Burney. At 7:30 o'clock, the judges honored a writ of prohibition and ordered the police commissioners and Captain Flahive brought from the county jail. The three were released on their own recognizance and ordered to report at 9:30 o'clock this morning when the argumens will be heard.

When the writs were being issued by Judge Burney for the release of the city jail prisoners yesterday forenoon, an obstacle arose. The writs needed the seal of the circuit court upon them and that seal was in the circuit court; the room locked and the clerk, former Justice J. R. Shoemaker, and all the deputies gone for hte day. But Charles Cameron, a clerk in Judge Burney's court, climbed through a transom of the circuit clerk's office and secured the seal.

Five Men Act as Police Chief Within Few Hours


Never in the history of Kansas City was the police department in such a turmoil as yesterday while habeas corpus writs were being served on officials in an effort to free the several hundred Pendergast and Edwards men arrested.

Within the course of a few hours the responsibility of being chief of police pro tem was shifted alternately upon the shoulders of five different men. When Captain Flahive, acting chief, was arrested, the title was passed to Lieutenant Peter J. McCosgrove. When McCosgrove was arrested, Lee Mullin, property clerk, assumed charge of the station and held the office for exactly twenty-seven minutes until Lieutenant R. L. James could be called from No. 7 station to ct as chief. he held the office until Captain Frank Anderson reported at 6 o'clock.

A flurry of excitement spread through headquarters at each arrest, but the situation gradually relaxed from one of seriousness to laughter. The arrests finally became so numerous that those at the station enjoyed themselves "kidding" Lieutenant McCosgrove and the others as they departed. They were addressed as "jail birds" and advised to fall in line, convict fashion, on the march to the court.

While all of this was transpiring Chief Hammill, shorn of most of his power by the commissioners, sat quietly in his office -- and possibly laughed silently to himself. He watched Commissioners Lapsley and Lamb leave the station in an automobile for the county jail.

Arrests Kept Bookers Busy.


"Well, chief," he was told, "there they go to jail and you're still here. Looks like you've gotten square with them."

"Yes, but it's pretty tough to have to go to jail," he replied. "However, I guess turn about is fair play."

Men were booked at the police station so fast during the entire day that the booker practically was busy all the time. Most of the prisoner, it was noticed, displayed either O'Neill or Edwards ribbons or buttons on their coat lapels. Not one was seen who wore a Jost button. These men were picked up on various charges, but each was booked "for investigation" and could not be released on bond.

Some of the men accused of attempted vote-buying had several dollar bills in their possession when searched. The bills were rolled up and each roll was encircled with a rubber band.

When the officer arrived at headquarters and served the writ on Captain Flahive the latter took it calmly. He first went to see mayor Jost, who was upstairs in the commissioners office. The mayor told him that he knew the law and how to obey it. The captain then accompanied the officer to court, from where he was taken to the county jail.

April 4, 2025 ~ "WE WILL WIN" IS WATCHWORD TODAY.

April 4, 2025
 
"WE WILL WIN" IS WATCHWORD TODAY.

Both Sides in Mayorality Fight Work Hard to Last Minute.

EDWARDS IS FAVORITE.

Betting Odds on Republican Candidate Continue Good.

ELECTION DAY WEATHER.
Cloudy and unsettled weather is the prediction for Kansas City for today, as indicated in the official forecast of Colonel P. Connor. There will not be much change in temperature.

The campaign closed last night with Republican and Democratic meetings in nearly every ward of the city. Both sides put forward their most capable and energetic speakers who carried the final message to the voters. All of the meetings were largely attended and the greatest of enthusiasm prevailed. The issues of the campaign were set forth as viewed by the respective sides, and there was a repetition by both sides of the personalities which have figured so prominently in the last ten days. Charges and counter chargers were handed out without any attempt at restraint, and the audiences seemed to like it.

This campaign will go down in history as one of the most vituperative in many years.

"We will win," was the belief confid3ently expressed last night at the headquarters of the two political parties, but both refused to give out figures or furnish facts on which their confidence was based.

BETTING FAVORS EDWARDS.

If the betting on the result is to be taken as a criterion Edwards will win. He has been the favorite among speculators from the very outset, and there has been but little deviation in the odds. Mr. Edwards has ruled favorite right along at $100 to $80, and yesterday bets were recorded of $100 to $60 and $100 to $70 that he would win.

The prevalent odds at the leading pool rooms on Delaware street yesterday was $100 to $80, and although $10,000 was wagered at these odds, it did not in any wise reduce the ratio and at midnight the friends of Edwards were still on hand with money.

The ill-feeling engendered during the campaign may be carried to the polls today, with the consequent results of fighting and rioting. The First, Second and Fifth wards are calculated to furnish deeds of violence on account of the intense feeling against "Tom" Pendergast and his goat family, who are openly opposing the election of Jost.

In these three wards Pendergast is a power and up the the present election he never knew any opposition. But today he will have plenty of it, as Denny Costello, a former lieutenant of the "big boss," is heading the Jost supporters in the three North side wards, and is out for alderman against Pendergast's mainstay, John. P. O'Neill, for alderman in the First.

COSTELLO IS CONFIDENT.


Costello was confident last night that he would defeat O'Neill, and prevent Pendergast from carrying the First ward for Edwards.

The responsibility of wresting the Second ward from Jost has been checked up to Miles Bulger, who is running for alderman on a self-styled Home Rule ticket. The Democrats were maintaining last night that Jost will carry the Second ward by a reduced majority, and that Bulger will be kept busy if he pulls through for alderman.

Rumors were astir last night that the Pendergast faction had imported a lot of gun men from Chicago to intimidate First ward Jost men today, but the report was laughed away by those who are cognizant of the physical prowess of the Pendergast followers.

NO MARSHALS AT THE POLLS.


A report was circulated yesterday afternoon that County Marshall Martin Crowe had ordered deputy marshals to the polls today. This was emphatically denied by J. W. Scoville, deputy at the marshal's office last night. Chief Deputy harry Hoffman, also said no orders of the kind had been issued.

Marshal Crowe, who is at St. Joseph's hospital, has issued no orders whatever for several days.

POLICE GET INSTRUCTIONS


Special Order No. 279, issued day before yesterday to the police of all stations, cautions that commanding officers and the men under them in charge of the voting precincts at the city election will be held "personally responsible for the orderly quiet and fair conduct of the election."

The order warns against allowing "any intimidating, harassing, bulldozing or bribing of voters," besides allowing officers to protect challengers in the discharge of their duty. As usual, no deviation from the rule that "all persons arrested for election offenses must be sent to police headquarters as soon as the arrest is made."

Accompany these instructions is special order No. 284, in which commanding officers are charged with seeing that all saloons in their districts shall be closed and kept closed from 12 o'clock today until midnight tonight.

WOMEN WILL BE ON DUTY IN THE SIXTH

Twenty-five women workers representing the Women's Honest Election League will be on duty in the Sixth ward today during the hours of the election. That there will not be more women on the lookout for illegal voting and for violations of the election laws is due to a lack of interest displayed by the women, according to Mrs. C. F. Neal, president of the league.

Final preparations for their work at the polls today were made at a meeting of the league yesterday at the Hotel Muehlebach. Only a few women were present, the small number evidently being a great disappointment to the women who have been most active in working for clean elections.

We find that the election officials have been very lax in their duties," said Mrs. Neal yesterday. "Evidently they have made little effort to ascertain if the names on the poll books are bona fide ones. We have been able to poll only the Sixth ward, and not all of that, and a small part of the Sixteenth, but have found many gross violations of the law."

Mrs. Neal displayed a list of seventy-two names taken from the registry books of the Sixth ward which she declared were fictitious and not qualified to cast ballots today.

"Out of a total of 320 names," declared Mrs. Neal, "we found these seventy-two fraudulent ones. Some are registered from numbers where there are no houses whatever; some are of persons dead; some have moved from the city, and some could not be located at all. If we had been able to poll the other wards of the city we are confident that we would have found many times this number of illegal names on the list.

"Because of the lack of interested displayed by the women in making this election a clean one, we will have but twenty-five women watchers at the polls tomorrow. These all will be in the Sixth ward and will challenge any person who attempts to vote under any of the names on this list of the seventy-two.

As far as police protection is concerned for the women who will be at the voting places tomorrow, we do not need any. Each woman worker will be properly provided with credentials, and we anticipate no trouble whatever. Mrs. Jesse James will have charge of the women workers tomorrow."

April 3, 2025 JEWS SAY POLICE ARE HARSH.

April 3, 2025
JEWS SAY POLICE ARE HARSH.


5th Ward Meeting Protests Against Treatment Race Receives.

The Jewish voters of the Fifth ward met at 1106 Independence avenue last night to register a protest against the police. The claim was made by the speakers that the police are disposed at times to deal too harshly with the Jews and arrest and use them roughly without cause or justification.

The simplified form of government proposed by the Republicans was explained by George H. Edwards, candidate for mayor; Fred Coon, candidate for judge of the North Side court, and Wentworth E. Griffin.

'A SWEDE IN PERIL' IS WARD WAR CRY. ~ Scandinavians Flock to the Standard of Gus Pearson.

February 8, 2026
'A SWEDE IN PERIL'
IS WARD WAR CRY.

Scandinavians Flock to the
Standard of Gus Pearson.

"A Swede is in peril!"

That was both the watchword and the reason assigned for the meeting last night at the Stockholm hotel at 1024 West Seventeenth street, where about 300 Second ward Republicans indorsed Gus Pearson for another term as city comptroller.

The Scandinavian settlement in Kansas City has had two city comptrollers, and each has made good with his party, and the present comptroller, Gus Pearson, made good with the Democratic administration, too, but they have never had other representation, and now they are out for a member in the upper house of the council.

Last night these Second warders met to indorse Mr. Pearson and have a lunch, and they listened to Fred Coon and Judge Harry G. Kyle while they were awaiting the adjournment of the city council and a chance to tell Gus Pearson that they are for him.

Charley Lawson, who was chairman of the meeting, sounded the watchword: "A Swede is in peril."

Lawson and other speakers told how Pearson is to be rolled at the Republican convention February 25 because, as they declared, he has incurred the enmity of party bosses.

It appeared to be the sense of the meeting that Pearson is to be "rolled" by the bosses because he remained under a Democratic administration and the speakers declared that these same bosses offered to go into the courts to protect their places in the service when the Democrats ousted all of them but Pearson and kept Pearson merely because he is competent.

JUDGE KYLE TALKS.

Judge Harry G. Kyle, who expects to carry the Second ward with the aid of Mr. Pearson's friends there, said in part:

"The freeholders, in drafting the new city charter, and in creating the hospital and health commission department of municipal government brought the city government close to the needs and wants of the people. This department will have control of the city hospital and all institutions now or hereafter owned or controlled by the city for the care of sick and injured persons; for the confinement, support and maintenance of insane persons.

"This commission will have a competent man to act as superintendent of the hospitals and other kindred institutions. It will also have a competent health commissioner to direct inspection of every part of the city, with a view to maintaining good sanitary conditions; also to inspect dairies, meat, food stuffs and water supplies for drinking purposes and to enforce all pure food laws."

"BOYS" FIND HOME FOR PENDERGAST IN FIRST. ~ Ward Workers Jubilant Over Practical Certainty That the Alderman Will Run Again.

February 5, 2026
"BOYS" FIND HOME FOR
PENDERGAST IN FIRST.

Ward Workers Jubilant Over Prac-
tical Certainty That the Alder-
man Will Run Again.

Alderman James Pendergast, 1100 Summit street, temporary abode only.

There is joy in the first ward. The boys have found a home for their patron and political saint, Alderman James Pendergast. After a long and wearisome chase the house hunters yesterday temporarily leased the unpretentious but comfortable dwelling at 1100 Summit street. It is located right in the heart of the First ward,and in a few days the alderman who for eighteen consecutive years has represented the ward in the lower house and gotten city jobs for thousands of the boys will be formally installed in his new domicile.

"Means you are going to be candidate for alderman again?" was suggested to the nestor of Democratic politics.

"Well, I told the boys that if they would find a home for me in the ward I might consider representing them again. Consider, mind you," replied Mr. Pendergast, "since my wife died, four years ago, I've been sort of a Gypsy, dividing my domicile between my farms in Kansas and Missouri and the home of my sister on Prospect avenue. I'm getting tired of calling home wherever I hang my hat.

"I want a place I can really call home, and the boys are going to install me in one in a few days. The boys would go to the end of the earth for me, and I suppose it us up to me to reciprocate."

"Hurrah! Jim is going to run for alderman again," gleefully shouted one of the boys.

"Qualify that with the word 'consider,' " interrupted the alderman.

NEGRO ORATOR PRESIDENT. ~ Down Town Kyle-for-Mayor Club Is Return for Advice Given.

February 2, 2026
NEGRO ORATOR PRESIDENT.

Down Town Kyle-for-Mayor Club Is
Return for Advice Given.

C. H. Calloway, one of the best known negro orators in Republican ranks, has become president of a Kyle-for-Mayor club with headquarters at 815 McGee street. Dr. E. C. Bunch is secretary of the club.

The negroes reside in various wards, but opened a down-town workshop patterned after "Shootin' Gallery" Bill Green's work for Darius A. Brown in the Eighth ward, where the white Republicans have a down-town office, a permanent headquarters and an auditorium for blow-outs in the Spiritualistic church farther east in the ward.

The negroes formed a club to work for Judge Kyle in return for advice he has given them that the way to elevate their race is by patronizing negro businesses and professional men.

JIM CROW BILL BEATEN. ~ Two Democrats Vote With Republicans and Kill It.

February 1, 2026
JIM CROW BILL BEATEN.

Two Democrats Vote With Repub-
licans and Kill It.

Two Democratic aldermen, W. C. Culbertson and Isaac Taylor, voted with the Republicans in the upper house of the council last night and defeated an ordinance providing for separate street car seats for negroes.

Mr. Culbertson's reasons for voting against the ordinance were that he feared it to be a trouble maker, and that it was not sufficiently explicit as to how the negroes were to be separated from the whites when the cars and platforms were crowded. Mr. Taylor gave a like reason.

Here is the vote:

For the ordinance -- Steele, Wirthman, Titsworth, O'Malley, Logan, Gregory; total, 6, all Democrats.

Against the ordinance -- Edwards, Havens, Tillhof, Bunker, Republicans; Taylor, Culbertson, Democrats; total, 6.

Absent -- Cronin, Democrat; Thompson, Republican.

Eight votes were necessary to carry the ordinance.

Before the session opened Alderman James Pendergast came over from the lower house and loudly proclaimed opposition to the ordinance. He said that it could not be enforced, that it would be declared unconstitutional and under his breath he told Democrats it would be a bad move politically.

FINAL "JIM CROW" ACTION TONIGHT. ~ Alderman J. E. Logan, Author of Measure, Disclaims Any Political Motive.

January 31, 2026
FINAL "JIM CROW" ACTION TONIGHT.

Alderman J. E. Logan, Au-
thor of Measure, Disclaims
Any Political Motive.

The council is expected to take action tonight on the ordinance requiring the Metropolitan Street Railway Company to furnish separate cars for negroes, or if permitted to ride with white passengers, to designate certain seats for them. As the measure is championed by Democratic aldermen there is every probability that Republican members will permit them to do all the voting in favor of the passage of the ordinance. This is the sentiment in the upper house, but not altogether in the lower house, for if Alderman Frank Askew, a Republican, has not changed his mind he will second a motion to be made by Alderman Miles Bulger, a Democrat, that the ordinance be passed under suspension of the rules.

This will call for ten affirmative votes, and if they are not forthcoming the ordinance will have to go to a committee.

All of these possibilities depends of course on the action of the upper house. A special committee headed by R. L. Gregory, president of that branch of the council, will recommend the passage of the ordinance and this can be done with eight affirmative votes. There are nine Democratic aldermen in the upper house, and the tip has gone out that they have been lined up to vote for the ordinance. Some of the Democrats were hesitating on the propriety of passing the ordinance on account of "political policy," but it is now stated that they have been induced to see it differently.

In political circles the cry has been set up that the ordinance has been introduced at this time to cripple the candidacy of a Republican alderman, who is seeking the nomination for mayor, and who will be called upon to cast his vote either for its passage or defeat. Alderman J. E. Logan, a Democrat, who fathers the ordinance, denies this allegation.

"There is no politics or racial question involved in the ordinance," said Alderman Logan yesterday. "Similar laws are in effect in other cities where there are large negro populations, and they are entirely satisfactory to both races."