BEARCATS LOSE N HARD FIGHT Whitman; Eats Bear Meat and Fattens Percentage Column to Unexpected Tune of 25 to 0. FAST PLAYS ARE NOTED Willamette' Forces BaH to Whitman Territory in Early Scramble i WALLA WALLA, Wash., Not. 11. The Missionaries, ate. bear meat today when Whitman defeat fd the Willamette university 25 to 0 in a contest in . which Whitman apparently outplayed in the first Smarter, came back strong.- The Bearcats had the bail In Whitman territory most of the first quar ter.. In the second quarter the slaughter started.' Roe, Whitman quarter, caught the kick-off and ran 85 yards for -atouchdown. Then Tilton hammered through t ho line for another score and Just aa the quarter ended Sheperd fil tered through the line for the last score. Only the . first goal war. " kicked. . Whitman was penalized heavily ; throughout the game. Neither side was able to do any. thing, with forward passes. . . , The lineupt 1 'V : v ""-: Whitman (25); Willamette (0) Schroeder . :.. ..rev . ..... Carey Heritage . . . . . .rt. . .... Lawstn Katchford ; . ..rg, . . . . . . Moody Lucht ;'..;...-.C... White Kmlgh . . . .lg. . . . . . Ramsey Comrada . '. . ...It. ........ Rarey Holmes'. . . . . . .le.. . . . Richards 1 Roe . . . . . ... . qb . . .'. . Isham Tiiton ...... i.rh. . . .... Zeller Sheperd Ih . . i . . . . Pattou Hall ... . . . . . f b . . . . Socolotsky Score by periods: Whitman .....0 7 18z0 23 Willamette ...0 0 0 0 0 Whitman scoring? Touchdowns TUton 2; Roe and. Sheperd. Goals from touchdowns Tilton 1. Substitutions: Whitman Har rison for Ratchtord; Kerr of Emigh; Townsend for Tilton; Til ton for Townsend; To wnsent for Shepherd. Willamette Daggett for Law con; Dunette for Tatton; Nich illo tor Moody; Cramer for Soco .. jotsky. '- - - .'.; Referee Moyer, Spokane. Urn p!re Holden, Portland. Head linesman Olson, Pullman. hllVt KNOWS AFTER 20 YEARS A cold, even waen It has devel oped a hacking cough, difficult breathing, sleepiest nights, raw throat and sore lungs, eren then a cold yields quickly to Foley's Honey and Tar. - Mrs. Milton Walte, Box ; 32, Azalia, ' Mich., write: "I hare used Foley's Hon ey and Tar for the past 20 years and find there is no other cough or croup remedy like - it. You may use my name.1. It gets right at the seat of the trouble. Child ren like It. Sold everywhere. Adr. : ' PLAIN WORDS MARK ; PRESIDENT'S TALK " ' (Continued from page l.j en adopted son: that matters lit tle, -because they glorified the same loyalty, they , sacrifice ! alike. -r , We do not know his station in : life because" from every station i tame the "patriotic resopnse. of I the 5,000.000. I recall the days of creating armies and the depart i ingr of caravans which braved the murderous seas to reach the toat- tie lines tor maintained national i ity and preserved civilization. The Service Hag marked man- .ston and cottage alike and ricnes were common, to all homes In the ; consciousness of serivce to tux country We do - not know the ' eminence of hla birth, but we do i know the alory of his death, lie 1 died for his country -and greater devotion hath no man than tma. He died unquestioning, uncom- plaiping with faith In his heart and hoDe on his ups, tnai me ! conntrv should - triumph and Its l c.vilization survive. As a typical i soldier of this 'representative de- ! mocracy, he fought and died, be- V.evine in the indispuiaDie jusuce of his country's cause. Conscious of the world's uhpeaval, apprais ing the magnitude of a war! the l'ke of which had never horrified humanity before perhaps, he be lieved his to be a- service destin ed to change the tide of human affairs. i World War Reviewed . In the death gloom of gas, the bursting of 'shells and the rain of bullets, men face more intimately the great God over all; , their souls are aflame and conscious ness expands and hearts are searched. With the din of battle, the glow of conflict and the su preme trial of courage, come in voluntarily the hurried appraisal of life and the contemplation of death's great mystery. On the threshhold of eternity many a soldier, 1 can believe, wandered how his ebbing blood would color ths stream of human lire, flowing on after his sacrifice. His pa triotism was none less if be braved more than triumph of country; rather, it was greater if he hoped for a victory for all hu man kind. Indeed, I revere that citizen, whose confidence in the righteousness of his country in spired belief that its triumph is the victory of humanity. This American soldier went forth to battle with no hatred for any people in i the world, but hat ing war and hating the purpose of every war for conquest. He cher ished our national rights and aD- horred the threat of armed dom inatoin; and in the maelstrom cf destruction and suffering and death he fired his shot for lib eration of the captive conscience of the world. " In advancing to ward his objective was some where a thought of a world awafc ened; and we are here to testify undying gratitude and reverence for that thought of a wider free dom. Thoughts Turn Backward On such occasions as this, amid euch a scene, our thoughts alter nate between defenders, living and defenders dead, A grateful repub lic will bo worthy of them both Our part Is to atone for the losses of heroic dead . by making a bet ter republic for the living. - Sleeping In these hallowed grounds are thousands of Ameri cans who have given their blood for the baptism of freedom and its maintenance, armed exponents of the nation's conscience. : It is better and nobler for their deeds. Burial here is. rather more than a sign of the government's favor, it is a suggestion of a tomb in the heart of the nation sorrowing for its noble dead. Today's ceremonies proclaim that the hero unknown is not un bonored. We gather him to the nation's breast, within the shadow of te capitol, of the towering shaft that honors Washington, the great father, and of the exquisite mon ument to Lincoln, the martyred savior. Here the inspirations of yesterday and the conscience of today forever unite to make the republic worthy of his death for flac and country. Ours are left resolutions today, as with tribute to the dead we consecrate ourselves to a better order for the living. With all my heart I wish we might say to the defenders who survive, to mother j who sorrow, to widows nd chil dren who mourn, that hof such sacrifice shall be asked again. Conflict Held Cruel It was my fortune recently to see a demonstration of modern warfare. It Is no longer a conflict in chivalry, no more a test of mil itant manhood. It is only cruel, deliverate, scientific destruction. There was no contending enemy, only the theoretic defense of a hy pothetic objective. But the attack was made with all te relentless methods of modern destruction. Thero was tha rain of ruin from the aircraft, the thunder oi artil lery followed by the unspeakable devastation wrought by nurst.ng shells; there were mortars belch- lug their bombs of desolation; ma chine guns concentrating their leaden "storm; there was the in fantry advancing, firing and falU ing like men with souls sacrificing for the decision. The flying mis siles were revealed by illuminat ing tracers so that we could note their flight "and appraise their dead lines. ' The air was streaked with tiny flames marking the flight of massed destruction; while the ef fectiveness of the theoretical de tense was lspressed by the simu lation of dead and wounded anion r those going forward undaunted and unheeding. As this panorama of unutterable destruction visual ized the horrors of modern con flict there grew on me the sense of the failure of a civilization which can leave its problems U Buch cruel arbitrament. .Sorely no one in authority with human si tributes and full appraisal of the patriotic loyalty of his country men, could ask the manhood of kingdom, emplro or republic to WIDOWS OF MINGO WAR VICTIMS. F 1 -1 i 4 v.. if r 4-1 1U' r ' mm V : Jt v i urn ill? r"8i i wtQt j Mrs. Ed. Chambers and Mrs. "Sid Hatfield, widows of tiie two noted figures in the Mingo coal war, are now In Washington to testify before the Senate Committee on Education and Labor. Frank P. Waish of Massachusetts charged that their husbands were shot down by as sassins hired by a detective agency, which figured in the strike. The picture of the two womenwas taken at the Capitol. lko mako sucn sacrifice untu ail rea- sonjhad " failed, until appeal to jusj'itb thrpugh understand U nad been denied, unt'.l every effort of love and Consideration for fellow men had been exhausted, until freedom itself and inviolate hon or had Men brutally threatened. 1 speak not as a paciiist tearing war, but rs one who loves justice and hatea war. I speak as one who belices the highest function of (government is to give its citi zens the security o peace, the op portunity to achieve and the pur suit of happiness. i I Loftiest Tribiiic Given jThe loftiest tribute we can be stow today the heroically earned tribute fashioned in deliberate conviction!, out of unclouded thought, either shadowed by re morse nor made vain by fancies, is jthe commitment of tfcis republic to Ian advancement never made be fore. If American achievement is a herrisbjed pride at, home, if our unselfishness among nations is all w wis i to bo and our la a r. ample i te world, then let us give qfj our influence and strength, yea, of cur esp rations and con victions, ;o put mankind on a lit tle higher plane, exulting and ex alting with war's disterssing and depressing tragedies barred from the staga of righteous civiliza tion. ! There have been a thousand de fenses justly and patriotically made; a thousand offenses which reason aid righteousness ought to have stayed. Let us beseech all men to ipin us in seeking the rule Utoder whjch reason and righteous ness shall prevail. I jStandihg today on hallowed ground, conscious that all America has halted to share in the tribute of heart land mind and soul to th s fellow American and knowing that the worl is noting this expression of the republic's mindfulnsss, it is fitting to say that this sacrifice ahd thai of the millions dead. stall no4 bo in vain. There must be, there! shall be, te commundin vbice ofj a Conscious, civilization against lirnied warfare. ( As wq return this poor clay to its mothier soil, garlanded by love and covered with the decorat'ons that onty nations can bestow, 1 ckn nene the prayers of our peo ple, of 4U pedples, that this Arm istice diy shall mark the be?? li ning ot a new and lasting era or peace oft earth, good will among men. Let me join in that prayer. Our jather, who art in heaven. hallowed by Thy name. Thy king dom cofne. Thy will be done on earth ai it Is id heaven. Give us this day our daily bread and for give U3j our trespasses as wo for give th.bae who trespass against us An lead us not into tempta tion, but deliver us from evil, for Thine lis the kingdom and. the power and glory forever, Amen. have rrlghtened the nurses and patients at the hospital, departing leaving a note signed with three K's," said State Kleagle Calla way. ' During the part two week3 local Klansmen assisted by my olfice have thoroughly investigat ed the affair and I am absolutely certain that no member of the Klan took part in or had knowl edge of the skulking trick. m if II-Ktiii I.i6ckiMl Up "Re'err'.ng again to a state ment made by me shortly follow ing tha incident. I call attention to the fact that all Klan regalia is under my personal care and had not been taken from the lockers at Portland. "I have just returned from a Falem conclave where I ascer tained that several score of your most reputable , citizens ara oa rolled with the Ku Klux Klan.j "Despite the opposit'.on broached against . this work by both newspapers of the city. th? o-eanization here Is growing rap idly and when Salem learns o the personnel of the organization snd of the true purpose of the Klan, I believe that it will be lotid of it. f ; Newspapers Found Opposed! I understand that both of a- more severely struck by the war may rise and reconstruct their economy is peace. This Is why all our efforts ninst be directed toward creating political guaran tees for the lasting maintenance 1 peace. Hre With Fiw Heart "This is the fundamental thought of Italian policy and it is for this reason that Italy greeted with full heart, the invi tation of President Harding and Is ready through our delegation here to grve ail the possible coa tribution to the conference in or der to obtain concrete result such as to create in the world that atmosphere of peace which constitutes today its supremo need." Japanese official statement: "Japan approach es this great meeting of the nations confident that the conference will succeed. Wa are undertaking this work in the knowledge that although there may be faults of detail in our position, it is in general a just one and in the belief tlrat all the nations will content them selves with facts as we shall do and devote themselves to unpre judiced examination of the facts. A sure foundation will be laid for an intsmational agreement that will make of armament lim itation a simple matter. World Ulamon for Peace "All the nations of the world, with their war wounds still sore, are clamoring for peace. And, thou?h fome of those wounds nre of the flesh, there are equally deep economic wounds. "Japan, in conimon with all other countries, is demanding re lief from the armament burden that threatens to strangle har in dustrial development. Our dele gation therefore is here prepared to bare the Japanese situation completely and to join the other nations in any just policy that may remove understandings and in any program .of arms, limita tion that assures our national se curity. We are sure of our position end ready to let it speak for it self in the conference. We want the world to learn our position from the conference itself and to make its own judgment." Itritisli Unit Comments British empire delegation "The stately and impressive symbolism of America's mourning for her sons and daughters dead in the caus-e of liberty, has deeply moved the hearts of their British comrades in the great war. It is a worthy prelude to the labors of the conference which begins tomorrow and to this, the British entire delegation, all parts of the empire, look to aid in the task of extricating the world from the unhappy conditions Into which war has plunged it, and to make a 0 DMPERb PEACE MEETING Mighty Voice for j Disarma ment Raised by Labor, Capital, Church, Arts enue for past wars, present arm ament and preparation for pos sible future wars We not omy petition our intiiean represeat adtea to hsa their endeavor, to win the v-orld away from war ami its terrible toll of life and wealth; we demand that they succeel. "We do not propose that Am erica alone disa"m. That would be folly and endanger all dem ocratic civilization. We demand international agreements, know- NEW YORK. Nov. 11 Repres entatives of labor, capital, frbe churches, the arts and the profes sions raised a mighty voicel in favor, of reducing armaments j to- ight when more than ten thous and persons, called ; together j by some three hundred I public spir ited organizations assembled ! at Madison Square garden to show their approval of th -purpose of the Washington conference j for the limitation of armament. I Samuel Gompers. president of the American Federation of Labor as the principal speaker, declared tne people or the world expect success for the armament corisfer- ence and they do not want ani ex cuse or a reason for failure. They are looking toward Washington with a mighty appeal, headed. and are not concerned about dif ferences in the meaning of words. A resolution calling upon! the conference "to remain in sesiuon until it accomplishes to the ful lest degree the purpose for which it was invited to convene," was adopted. j "With regret and astonish ment." it said, "we learn that our government spends approximately 85 cents of every dollar of j-ev- the peace, secured at so great cost, the inalienable heritage of mankind." Among the statesmen and dip lomats of the visiting nations the great topic of interest t5hlght was the address made at Arlington to day by President Harding who summoned the conference into be lng and who will welcome it to American soil tomorrow. Upon l.rr'of satisfaction that in paying his tribute to America s soldier dead TIRE REDUCTION Cords Size ' Fabrics ' - '" . 00x3 $ 8.75 $15.90 30x312 9.75 19.75 132x312 , 13.25 19.50 31x4 ' 14.60 27.50 S2x4 16.95 28.00 33x4 17.65 30.50 . 34x4 . 18.10 "28.50 32x4 1 , 29.50 , 33x412 27.50 30.50 1 34x4 Vr 27.50 33.50 ' " 35x4 25.00 35.00 - 36x4i2 30.50 39.75 35x5 26.50 Full Guarantee We have the largest assortment of Tires in Salem and it is only on account of oar large buying capacity and experience that we are able to give you both price and quality. ! Malcom Tire Co. Commercial and Court Streets SALEM, OREGON . 1 One of a Chain of Stores. Established 1917 ! nnpciFltion to the Klan. Only one side of the Etory has been given consideration when such an attitude is taken. Get acquaint ed with the organization, and you v ill learn that it is deserving ol the support of the best citizens and the e'eanest press represen tatives in the country." GREAT POWERS HAVE ! FUTURE IPJ HAND (Continued from page 1.) i immense catastrophe and needs to find again in equilibrium. Tae war broke the economic un'tvj of lb world, the enormous finan cial sacrifices which the war m M.sed on the peoples exhausted their force of resistance, created among different countries, uch a great difference in their econom ic conditions and the value! of their money as to render alnjost impossible any commerce amjong them Now the supreme condi tion in order that the equilibrium of the world mav be revest ablish- ed and in ord?r that the countries j the chief executive grasped his op portunity to renew the pledge of the United States to take its fuli share of leadership in the attain ment of a better order. . In the fulfillment of that pledge it is the expectation of all the delegates that the American government will place before the conference as soon as it begins its work a concrete proposal for arm flment limitation. Such a proposa has been prepared by the Ameri can delegates and there seems tu be universal agreement that as the initiator of the negotiations the United States should have the firs say. Whether the proposal wil be submitted tomorrow, however is a question which present indica tions would answer in the nega tive. The American delegation held a final conference today, Secretar Hughes calling it together soon after the ceremonies at Arlingtor wee concluded. Read The Classified Ads. A CHEER LEADER IN ACTION. KU KliUX KLAN EXISTS IN SALEM LOCALITY (Continued from page I.) The widespread propaganda indi cating jthat the Klan would pro mote pogroms or inquisitions is n absolute falsehood, ridiculous and unfounded. f jQnizzed by Writer j j ''Light on thi3 entire contro versy iis afforded in an interview given Xathan Kana, an accredited newspaper correspondent by Lloyd I Hopper, grand goblin of:New York state. Kane had been sent by Jewish newspaper's, and his !story Has besn published in Jew ish organs throughout the coun try, under the caption "Ku Klux Klan riot Anti-Jewish." In this Interview, Mr. Hoorer explains why the. Klan is com posed jof 1 people having but oua Jalth. V'fre T-eUg'ono .' variance, i friction is bound to This does not nwau th.it ing that the people of all coun tries voice the convictions jhem expressed." ; f f An eastern I osteopath claim that the brain 'is the most Impor tant function of the human body. Vet there are so many folks wiia, apptar to be atle to do without it. ;!;.V , ;.: j. V-K- ! Read The Classified Ads.. THE BIG SUNDAY SHOW Three Feature Acts Dubin & Oliver Co "As You Like It" f A Vaudeville Cocktail Revue The Popular Comedian Pete Curley Assisted uy Belty Davison and Jqe Curley Checked j De Pierre Trio ! Exponents of Extraordinary Equilibrium v- rft i I 'I ni arise. we are enemies of the Catholics or the! Jew. We Protestants can not join th? Knights of Colum bus or Jewish societies like the B'nai Brlth, can we?'' i i Hospital Affair Denied j "I km in Salem for two pur poses.) the most important of whichj i. to conclude the investi gat'on of the Deaconess hospital ctfairi where two individual? were reported to ha7e donned regalia similar to Klan uniicrms and to 1 ' ' ' '''' " i 1 r Wk V - - f-- 1 If &y ' - ' sr ".y -1 I t - ,-L? ' . x. ..I 1 , . If - This Is how the University of Chicago does it, particularly when the football eleven is la the lead. - Photograph shows R. Cody, cheer leader of the Chicago college, leading the student at the recent gaina with Prinotrn ; . 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HEATERS No. 22 Mascot Heaters Special for Saturday Only aU. $19.40 s4 REMEMBER These Specials Are For SATURDAY ONLY i Wort Dep 177 Nortl Liberty Street artment Gray Store r .... - : - - (.., Salem, Oregon