Chicago School of fiction: Howells, W. D., essay on, 173-74; members of, 172; Wyatt, Edith Franklin, place in, 172-77. Chicago Symphony Orchestra: Frederick Slack may leave ( 1921 ), 184; opens 29th season (1919), 57. "Chicago through a Camera Lens/' article by Glen E. Holt, 158. Chicago Union Stock Yards, su Union Stock Yards. 11 Chicago Was Theirs," article by James A. Clifton, 5. Chicago White Sox: in 7th place (1921), 248; lose to Tigers in 1921 opener, 185; lose World Series (1919), 57; 1919 World Series scandal rumored, 59, 122; 1919 World Series scandal trial, 246; players indicted, 122; "square boys" rewarded, 179; win pennant (1919), 57. Churches: Episcopal Cathedral burns, 184; First Congregational, relief headquarters (1871), 222; North Side, burn in 1871 fire, 209. City planning: bond issues on Burnham plan carry, 58; by aerial photography, 167. Civil disorders: communist gathering (1921), 248; Haymarket Riot, 170; SDS demonstration (late 1960s), 187, photo., 187. Civil \-\~ar prison camps, su Camp Douglas. Clark, Charles R: photo. by, 163; photograph collection, 164; phot0graphy of, 164. Clayton, John: compiler, !lliTlois Fact Book and Historical Almanac, 189; expelled from Fiume by d'Annunzio, 58; "I low They Tinkered with a River," article, 32. C lifton, James A., "Chicago Was Theirs/' article, 5. Clubs: Glenview Golf burns, 1 1g; Glenview Golf reopens, 245; Union League, honors John Drinkwater, 58. Coliseum, Cox-Roosevelt rally (1920), 179. Collyer, the Rev. Robert, urges optimism after 1871 fire, 237. Colosimo, "Big Jim," murdered, 118. Columbia Record Co.,Joe "King,, Oliver records for, 137. Communists: A. Stoller Tobinson, 24~; gathering dispersed, 248; protest Sacco-Vanzetti sentence in Pans ( 192 1), 249; threaten worker's uprising (1921), 245; Ste also Radicals. Compton, Glover, with band, photo., 139. Confederate soldiers, su Camp Douglas. Conley's Patch, 199. Constitutional Convention (IIl., 1920): Cook County delegates threaten to quit, 180; limits Cook County representation_ in Senate, 180. Cook County Court House and 01ty Hall: burns 1n 187r fire, 205- c6; ruins of after 1871 fire, photo., 111s1de front cover No. 4, 208. Cook County Real Estate Board, reports plentiful housing (1921), 246. Copelin, Thomas, Sherman House, photo., by, 194. Cosmopolitan State Bank, to build at Chicago Ave. and Clark St. (1919), 57. Cottage Grove Ave. Cable Car line, 48. Country house near Chica~o: care of guests, 98; duties of staff at, 96-98; flower room, 99; guests amusements, 99i house and garden, photo., 97; inside staIT, photo., 98; outside staff, photo., 98; servants' uniforms, CO~~-James M., campaigns in Chicago (1920), 179. Creole Jazz Band: group photo., l'.10; recording for Gennett, 138. Crime: Arbuckle, Roscoe "Fatty," questioned in death of actress, 248; Chicago criminals threat to rural dis~ricts, 185; . C?losirno, "Big Jim," murdered, 118; gangsters and pzz! 139;_ He1tler-Pearlman whiskey theft (1920), 179; hold-up totals 1n Chicago (19~:20) 1 180; murder rate (1919), 59; Orthwein, Isabelle Cora, murder trial, photo., 247; police aid in whiskey theft, 179; rise in hus?a.n?, -murdcrs, 245; state police force urged (1920), 180; su also proh1b1t1on. Cudilhy, Joseph M., made president of Sinclair Refining Co., 116. Curie, Mme. 1\1arie, visits Chicago, 246. Czolgosz, Leon: assassinates McKinley, 170; implicates Emma Goldman, 170. Daguerreotypes, popularity in U.S., 158. D'Andrca, Antbony: headquarters bombed, 183; killed, 245. Debs, Eugene, meets Emma Goldman, 170. De Koven, Reginald, dies in Chicago 59. Dempsey.Jack, match with Gt"orgcs Carpentier (1921), 246. Disaslers: Armour grain elevator explosion, 185; Porter (Jnd.) train wreck, 184; tornado kills 29, r 17. Divorce, Chicago gco~raphical factor in, 245. Dodds, _(ohn, wilh Creole Jazz Band, photo., 130. Dodds, \i\'arren, wilh Creole jazz Band, photo., 130. Douglas, Camp, ste Camp Douglas. Douglas, Slephen A., home, photo., 167. . . Dozier, Ada, awarded damages for death of husband in J 91 g race nots, 24.'iDr.tft: agitation against, 17 1; Ber&'doll, Grover Cleveland, arrested for evasion, 245; list of Chicago \'\orld \Var f evaders published, 245; Zimmerman, Hans, arrested for evasion, 245. Drake Hotel: opens (1920), 180; opens, photo., 182j shops in sued, 185. Drake, Tracy C., opens hmel (1920), 180. Dreamland Cafe, jazz club, photo., 133. Drinkwater, John, honored by Union League Club, 58. Dunavan, Joseph M., Confederate prisoner at Camp Douglas, song ql!Oled, 83. "The Dunleith and Dubuque Bridge,,, ariicle, 1 15. Dunleith and Dubuque Bridge: photos., inside front cover No. r, 114; on its building, 1 15. Eastman, George: box camera, 162-64; introduces "American'' film, 164. E.conomy: building boom (1921), 249; aITec.ts marriages (1921), 246; employment rises (1921), 182; gasoline pnces (1921), 182; losses by State Street stores, 183; restaurant prices, 182; restaurant prices (1921), 183: Scars-Roebuck lo,-.•crs wages (1921), 184; steel industry unemployment (1920), 179; unemployment among veterans (1921), 245, 248; unemploymeo1 frared cause of crime (192r), 248; unemployment in Chicago (1921), 180, 184. "Edith Wyatt: The Jane Austen of Chicago~", article by Clara ~f. and Rudolf Kirk, 172. Einstein, Albert, visits U. of C., 245. Eisenberg, David: on publication of firs! Tarzan book, 21-22; on James Allen Si. John's studio, 27. Elections: bombing at D'Andrcst headquarters, 183; Cox and Roosevelt nominated, 121; Ilardjng nominatC"d (1920), 119; Lowden wins presidential primary, 117; reform judges win (1921), 246; Republican national convention opens (1920), 119i voter totals (1920), 122. F.tevated train lines, sre Transport,lllon.
Elite Cafe, /Jholo., 137. Employment, see Economy. Ethnic groups: Chicago Irish, plan protest parade- (1920), t79, prot<'St An fnstitutc lions, 180, urge recognition of Irish Republic, 185; foreign language press adver1ises illegal s1ills, 183; Stt aho Negroes. Evers, Johnny: manages Cubs, 179; su also Tinker, Joe-. Eutry One His Own I-Vay, book by Edith \.Vyittt, p. 129; 1lowells praises, 174 1 I 76. Expositions: 1921 Pageant of Progress, 246; \Vorld's Columbian, trains to, 51. Fairbank, Nathaniel, employment chairman, 1871 fire relief, 230. Fairbanks, Douglas, in Chicago ( 1920) 1 photo., 12 1. Farwell, Arthur Burrage, urges prohibition enforceni('nt (1921), 248. Farwell,John V., reopens business after 1871 fire, 238. Fashion: children's short clothes, 145; head bands, 180; knickerbockers, 249; shorter skirts (1921), 180; student fads at U. of C. (1921), 183. Field, Leiter, and Co.: rebuilds after 1871 firc-, 238; ruins (1871) 1 photo., 212. Field, Marshall, Pullman dines with, 149. Field Museum of Natural History, opens, 245. Films: Dr. Caligari's Cabinet, 245; The Sheik, opens, -249; Tarzan, 22 1 27- 31. Fires: 1874, description of, 242; electrical fire in Loop (1919), 57. Fire, Great Chicago: account by Loesch, F.J., 204; account by weatherman, 214; anniversaries of celebrated, 240, 248, 249: banks recover quickly, 238; Bross, William Lloyd, booms Chicago after, 237; building ordinances defied after, 238; burning coal piles, photo., 205; Chicago Library Association burns, 234; Cincinnati relief soup kitchen, Leslie's illus., 222; city's assets not destroyed, 244; controlled by blasting, 215; Cook County Court I louse ruins, j)l1otos., inside front cover, No. 4, 208; evacuation of North Side, 206-10; fatalities, 203; Field, Leiter and Company ruins, photo., 212; gas works burn, 206; general devastation described, 211 - q; growth of city after, 244; llarte, Bret, roem on, 215; hotels rebuilt, 239; inspires first international relic effort, 220; intense heat, 215; Kerfoot, \V. D., rebuilds first, 238; "Kerfoot's Block," photo., 239; long-term international aid to victims, 225-26; 1vlcLaughlin, Catherine (O'Leary's tenant), testifies on origin, 218-19; medal commemora1ing 100th anniversary, photo., 256, back cover No. 4; monument, pltoto., 219; national reaction to, 236; New York collects for victims, woodrnt, 227; North Side ch~irches burn, 209; North Side scene, paintiri~, front cover No. 4; 0' Leary house survives, 2, 6, photo., 217; 0' Leary, Catherine, testifies on origin, 216; other cities send relief, 220-21; Post Office and Customs I louse, ruins, photo., 213; prc~fire city (article on), 196; progress of, 204; Pullmans witness, 144; rebuilding at Randolph and La Salle sts., photo., 241; rebuilding of city (article on), 236; recovery resumes after 1873 recession, 243; rcf ugces camp on pra irie, 2 1o; relief fund totals, 226; relief program (article on), 220; (ue also Chicago Relief and Aid Society a1/tl General Relief Committee); routes of escape, 207; ruins of North Side, photo., 211; spirit of resurgence, 236-38; stimulates architecture, 243-44; water works burn, 214; weather conditions. -214; \.Vcathcr Office records burn, 214; West Side fire of day before, 204, 214; wind movements explained, 214-15. "The First Year of 1J ull-1 louse, 1889-1890 ... , " article by ?-.,1ary Lynn McCree, 101. Fitzmorris, Chief of Police Charles: bans Ku Klux Klan parade in Chicago (1921), 248; charges police with bootlegging (1921), 248; secs crime caused by unemployment (1921), 248. Flower, Mrs. Lucy L., dies, 185. Foch, Marshal Ferdinand, visits Chicago, 249. Fort Donelson, battle of, supplied prisoners to Camp Douglas, 84. Free Speech League, formed, 17 1. Fuller, Jlenry B., W. D. Howells ranks Edith Wyatt wi1h 1 172. Fulton Market, opens, 245. Galena grain elevator (the), photo., 165. Galli-Curci, Amelita. divorced, 59. Garden, Mary: gives radio concert from Auditorium (1921), 249; made director of Chicago Opera, 182; photo., 181; shocks audience, 182. General Relief Committee: disorganization, 223; issues railroad passes, 223; memhership, 222; opens food distribution depots, 222-23; organized after 1871 fire, 222; passes bread ordinance, 223; see also Chicago Relief and Aid Society. Germania Inn, 80, 8 r. Gibbs, 0. C., superintends 1871 relief program, 225. Gifford, Frances, photo. of, -29. Gitlin, Todd and Nancy Hollander authors, l 'ptown, 186. Glenview Golf Club: burns, 119; reopens after fire, 245. Goldman, Emma: deported to Russia. 171; dies in Toronto, 171; imprisoned, 171; in Chicajo, 171; meets Czolgosz, 170; photo., 17 r; removed to Cook County ail, 170-71. Gooding, William, Chief Engineer for lllinois and Michigan Canal, 36, 37. Goodrich Co. docks, photo. 1 165. "Grander and Statelier 1han Ever . . ," article by Herman Kogan, 236. Grant Park, pre- fire, 199. Greeley, Andrew M., book review, "Another Look at Mike Royko's Boss," 250. Greenebaum, Henry, promotes Chicago after 1871 fire, 237. Greene, P. B., stereograph photo. by, 161. "The Gripman Wore a Sheepskin Coat," article by George T. Bryant, 47. Gunsaulus, Dr. Frank VV.: advisesJane Addams, 103; dies, 184; quoted in praise of H ull~House plan, 1o+. Gunther, Charles F.: Chicago Historical Society funds purchase of his collection, 118; dies, 59. Hahn, Policeman Albe.rt, breaks up communist demonstration, 248. Hammond, Charles Goodrich, emigration chairman, 1871 fire relief, 230. Hannah and I fogg, goes out of business, 245. Hardin, Lillian: begins jazz career, 135; in Creole Jazz Band, photo., 130. Harding, \.Va1¡rcn G.: elected, 179; nominated (1920), 119; offe rs Gov. Lowden Navy post, 183. Harte, Bret, "Chicago, October 10, 1871" (poem), 215.
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