TT CIRCULATION Dally average for June, 6,169. Member Audit Bureau of Circulation. Member Associated Press Full leased THE WEATHER Washington and Oregon: Tonight and Tuesday fair. Lbcal: IN'o rainfall; westerly winds, part eloudy, minimm, 80, minimum, 55, river, minus .1 foot and stationary. . .TaW I OT1MTD1 II1' J Wlre service. FOURTY-FOURTH YEAR NO. 168. SALEM, OREGON, MONDAY, JULY 17, 1922. PRICE TWO CENTS ON TRAINS AND NEWS STANDS FIVBJ CKNTS 111 III A mu 12 i i i v i i ii ri ii 11 I : 11 lift It u uui M J SERIF 5 mut MINE WOUNDED MEN O N N lob Attacks Workers In West Virginia; All Kinds of Weapons Used -Tipple Blown Up Wheeling, W. V., July 17. Sheriff H. H. Duvall and 12 other i persons were killed and no less than 25 others wounded in a fight Ht the Standard mine of the Rich land Coal company, two miles from Welsburg this morning, ac cording to a telephone message from the correspondent of the Wheeling News at Wellsburg. The mine, which had been working on n open shop basis, was reported o have been attacked by a large arty of men from over the Penn Mvania line. After the fight they burned the tipple. Governor Morgan has "ordered Sheriff Harry Clouse of Ohio county to take charge of the situ ation. State police and all Ohio icounty deputies are en route to the scene. Burn. Tipple and Houses. Sheriff Clouse before leaving tor the mines said he hail been in kormed that miners were involved in the fight and tliat they had Jburned the Richland tipple and Hired houses at Cliftondale, a rain ling village near by. Nine of the men supposed to be striking miners from Pennsyl vania who attacked the mine have been arrested ana three of them who were injured have "been taken to a local hospital. The attacking party, said to number several hundred, opened fire on the mine guards and sher (Continued on Page Five.) TALK OF CLOSING STORES TO "HARVEST CROP OF BERRIES Closing of all business houses in order that the help might aid in harvesting the loganberry crop which is going to waste because of lack of pickers, was proposed this Boon by Elmer Daue at the lunch eon of the Commercial club in the Marion hotel this noon. Over 25 per cent of the crop is going to waste, it was pointed out and it is believed that with the business houses of the city closed several hundred pickers can be ob tained. Mayor George E. Halvorsen as serts that he is in favor of the business men and city taking some action to relieve the situation; while Edward Schunke, president of the business men's league, stat ed that he had taken up the mat ter with several uusiness men, who were not in favor of the prop osition and did not believe that the stluation could be much re lieved. i" William Gilchrist, head of the Phez farms, proposed that the business houses close three half days, the helping going to work In the morning and the stores pening in the afternoon. To pre vent the store employes from not appearing at the berry fields, all employers would require their employes to showing their picking checks. Mr. McGilchrist also proposed that the employers and proprietors of stores provide transportation for the members of their sales forces to reach the berry patches., On a motion put by Otto Hart man, Mayor Halvorsen, presiding, asked for those in favor of clos ing stand, and It was decided that the stores should close on the Wednesday, Thursday and Friday mornings. Lists will be taken of all store help wishing -to go to the yards and will be given, the Commercial club so that any one desiring pick ers can place their application there for help. In discussing the matter an ap peal to the entire community to come to the aid of the berry grow ers was made by Mr. Hartman and Mr. McGilchrist, the former point ing out that it meant something like $250,000 to the community to have the crop saved this year. DIESIOOIOUEMBACK MOUl President Harding Plans To Act Within a Day Or Tj ? To End Coal And j fil Strike. 01 Chlcagt S fuly 17. (ByAssoci ated Pre i Peace prospects in the railn j strike were dimmed today byi j addition of approxi mately 11 iOO men to the forces of the st srs. Negotiations for a settlement were temporarily at a standstill, with no positive indication as to the next move or its possible re sult. By many it is believed that the nation this week will meet the major industrial crisis of its his tory. Seventy-five thousand mainte nance of ways workers in New York switching area were sched uled to leave their " posts this morning in answer to a region strike call. To this number were added close to 10,000 oilers and stationary firemen and engineers throughout the country whose strike call last week fixed this morning as the hour for cessation of work. Clerks and freight handlers in various sections plan ned to leave their work in groups ranging from less than a hundred upward. Washington, July 17. (By As sociated Press.) Intimation was given in well informed govern mental circles this afternoon that the administration was preparing to take drastic action within the next 48 hours in the coal strike situation. The president was represented as being of the opinion that Inas much as the miners' representa tives had refuseu (government ar bitration and the bituminous op erators were undecided on accept ance of such a proposal that the interest of the public demanded immediate reopening of the mines With this feeling it was said the president was prepared to o- rect the mine operators to reopen their mines at once under protec tion of federal troops and with an American flag planted at the en trance of every mine to be oper ated. The operators would be ex pected to comply immediately with such an edict. The president has in mind, it was further reported, to pay, if necessary, for a short time a royal ty on such coal as would he mined to meet the emergency. Jf there are insufficient num bers of non-union miners to op erate the mines when re-opened under government protection, it was intimated that a call for vol unteer miners would go out from the government, officials believ ing there are thousands of miners who now are engaged in other pursuits but who would respond tp such a call. BANKERS OPEN PORTLAND MEET Portland. July 17. First ses sions of the twentieth annual con vention of the American institute of Banking opened here today and the convention which has brought more than 1000 delegates from an parts of the country will continue nntil Thursday witn a aay oil iu morrow for a trip over the Colum bia highway. The delegates were formally welcomed today by Mayor George L. Baker, on benall oi me c.ij and E. H. Sensenlcn oi roru delivered greetings from the Am erican Bankers' association. Car ter E. Talman of Richmond, Va., vice president of the American institute of Banking responded. PrMltient Robert B. ixicks vi Detroit presided and delivered his annual report and secretary Rich ard V. Hill, New York, made his report j ct Professor fcamunu n. Ttrn .hln trtftt the University oi a Seattle, was on the program for xn address on tne msiorj iorthwest. i T Governor Makes Public Letter Showing Appeal for Funds From Ku Klux Klan Officials Letters showing that the Ku Klux Klan has "developed a pow erful financial organization which is raising a fund up to $50,000 or more to be used in financing the recount contest of Mr. Hall," have been made public by Governor Ol cott in a statement in which the governor invites Hall "to make a fair and square count of all of the precincts of the state to determine the exact result of the election and to satisfy the people of the state," instead of limiting the re count to the few selected precincts in which the contestant feels that a recount might result to his ad vantage. One of the letters wh-ich is made public by the governor is signed by T. A. Rogers, super-kleagle ot the Knight ot the Ku Klux Klan, realms of eastern Oregon-south- eastern Washington. It Is dated at Walla Walla. Washington, June 27, and calls attention of tne klansmen to the fact that "at the regular meeting on June 24 of the Walla Walla provisional klan, it was unanimously voted that this klan shold contribute an amount equal to $2 per member to assist in financing a recount and such other legal action as is necessary in order that the will of the ma jority of the people of Oregon may prevail in the ecent primary nominating recount." Ask for $50,000. The estimated cost of such a recount the letter explains, is placed at $50,000. The letter from the super- kleaele directs the klansmen to "make checks payable either to cash or to P. L. Wadley," and ad monishes the reader to "destroy this letter by fire upon reading it." Another letter made public by the governor is signed by R. W Sinclair, kligrapp of the Ku Klux Klan, realm of Oregon and calls upon the klansmen in his realm for voluntary contributions of $2 per member to defray the expense ot the recount Institutea Dy nan. A third letter is signed by Hall himself calling for contributions to the recount fund which he esti mates at $25,000. These letters, the governor ooints out, indicate that the in fluences back of the primary re suit contest are not confined to Oreeron alone. " The governor, in his statement declares that "if I did not receive the Dlurality of tne republican votes cast for the governorship in the recent primaries I do not want the nomination," but insists tnai "it is preposterous to assume that if there were irregularities in all nt the nrecincts designated Dy Air Hall these irregularities would all be to the detriment of Mr. Hall and that no irregularities could exist in the 1000 or more other precincts not mentioned in tne pe nnon." "Upon returning from a week's highway inspection trip in the nrt of the state I have riven, for- the first time. what analyze the recount proceedings Instituted eainst me bv Senator Hall ana desire to present to the public the otiMstlnn which exists," said Gov ernor Olcott in a statement issued today. There has come into my pos session within the past few days a number of documents indicating that the Ku Klux Klan has de- inncH a nowerful financial or ganization which is raising a fund up to $50,000 or more 10 db usu in financing ttje recount couieai tor Mr. Hall. These documents in- (Continued on page two) SPEEDER IS ARRESTED HERE J. W. Wood, of thls-city, was taken into custoay ssaiuraay night on a charge of speeding by Motorcycle Patrolman Parrent. Mr. Wood was required to furn ish $$10 bail and was cited to ap pear before Police Judge Ear! Race this afternoon. OF UN OF ELECTION mmM Tine Ku Us How Mr. "The Modern Ku Klux Klan" Coroner's Jury Finds Hammer Murderess Is ..... f Resposnsible for Crime , Los Angeles, Cal., July 17. The hammer murder of Mrs. Al berta Meadows, 20-yearAold wid ow, was charged to Mrs. Clara Phillips today by a coroner's jury following a brief, dramatic in quest here today. The verdict was that death was due "to a fracture of the skull by a' hammer blow at the hands of Mrs. Clara Phillips in premedi ated murder." Following preliminary testi mony establishing identity ot the young slain widow, the inquest plunged into the lurid drama. The tense feeling enveloping tne in quest room grew as the graphic details of horror poured out as Mrs. Peggie Cafee described the death scene. It reached its climax when the agitation ot Mrs. Caffee developed to the breaking point and testimony was halted when she took some cold water aB a re storative. "I don't like to talk about the blood," she said, pale and trem bling. She repeated the details as she had given them to the grand Jury. Meets Slain Woman. She said the first time she met Mrs. Meadows,' the victim, was upon the day of the murder, Debs Urges General Strike Of Labor To Aid Railroad Men Chicago, July 17 -Eugene V. Debs, leader of .the American rail way union strike in 1894, today issued a statemnt to the striking railroad men and other unions that the time has come for the rank and file to unite and "strike together, vote together and fight togther." "There has been some slight disorder and a few scabs have been hurt," Mr. Debs said. "This has been the extnt of the violence but it has been sufficient to bring to the strikers what they fought for in the late world war The federal government announces through the department of Justice that it will stand no trifling on the part of the strikers and that if necessary armed force will be employed at once for their sup pression. "The governors of seven states have simultaneously announced that they have the national guard mobilized and ready to move at command when the ex Igencies of the situation demand action. "You will have no trouble in guessing what kind of action is thus meeant on the part of the national governments which you shouted for, voted for. Invested your last dollar for, and cross ed the Atlantic to fight and be Fry Became a Kleagle of This is the second installment of Mr. Fry's great book setting forth the truth about the secret society that seeks to dominate Oregon. The book is an expose of the methods, purposes, obli gations and operations of "The Invisible Empire of the Knights of the Ku Klux Klan," including the history of the original Ku Klux Klan of civil war and reconstruction days and its modern imitation. Mr. Fry is the author of the New York World expose of the Ku Klux Klan, which brought about the Congression al Investigation and won for the World the medal for the most meritious service rendered by any newspaper during the year. He is a former "kleagle" and reveals the sinister secrets of the order from within. The Capital Journal will print a chapter a day. less than an hour before the slay Ing. Her story began with the day before, laBt Tuesday, when she met Mrs. Phillips went shop ping with her and saw the former movie beauty purchase a cheap hammer. Tuesday afternoon, Mrs. Caffee testified.' Mrs. Phillips told her that she had been told her hus band was going around with a girl named Alberta and she believed the, story because her husband had been neglecting her. It was then they met Mrs. Mea dows, she said, it being her first and only meeting with her. Mrs. Phlllios requested that Mrs. Mea dow drive her home, acceptance, divergence from the route near the point in the Montecito hills, stopping on the hillside when Mrs. Phillips asked Mrs. Meadows to leave the car a moment, were re cited by Mrs. Caffee. : "She asked Alberta if Mr. Phil lips did not give her the tires for her automobile and a wrist watch," Mrs. caffee testified. "Mrs. Meadows denied this and Clara (Mrs. Phillips) said: ' 'He certainly did,' and" with that struck her with the hammer. "Alberta started to run and Clara chased her for half a block and brought herfrack by the arm. gassed and die for in the war to make the world in general and in America particular safe for Democracy and Liberty. "And now that the war is ov er and Kalserlsm is dead and De. mocracy and Liberty and on top this Bame crowd, to a man, to whom you rallied in such frenzy ot enthusiasm, to compensate you for your noble patriotism, is now lined up against you in battle array and ready to shoot you down like dogs. "It is true, Mr. Union Man, that your craft r union leaders with scarcely an exception stood with the Wall Street profiteers in howling for war and rushing you ,the common herd, into the trenches to be gassed, mutilated and murdered while they remain ed in the rear to receive the plaudits of the plutocratic press for their patriotism. But that does not excuse you, for you chose those leaders and were res ponsible for them, and after all, the' leaders are about as fit or otherwise as the rank and rile that elects them. "If in the light of this situation you do not realize the crying need for unity, for solidarity on every front, regardless of creed or col or, you are Indeed in a pathetic Continued on PageJ'iye.) I thought they had made up, but when they came to the car she hit her again and the blood spurted out and streamed down." Storv of Murder. R was at this point that Mrs. Caffee broke down. She resumed a few minutes later, saying she stepped between the two women and "Clara told me to get out of the way." "The blood made me sick and 1 went down the road," she testi fied. "I looked back and saw Clara strike her one blow while Alberta was on the ground." She testified that a few minutes later the car reached her and Mrs. Phillips was driving alone. "She looked furious and said: Don't you dare tell abot this. Vou are in this as much as I.' " Mrs. Phillips drove downtown and left her, she said. Two detectives testified follow ing Mrs. Cafee. One of them pro duced the broken handle of the Instrument of murder, a stained hammer handle. There was an audible gasp among spectators, and Genora Tre- maine, younger sister of the slain widow, sighed as she buried her face in her hands to shut out sight of the death weapon. E Peking, July 17. (By Assoc! ated Press.) A majority of the Chinese newspapers consider that a grave crisis has arisen as a re sult of internal disorders. They urge that parliament . assemble promptly and that President LI Yuan-Hung exercise drastic meas ures to exterminate the militar ists who are declared selfishly to be fermenting trouble with a view to making the Peking government helpless to overthrow them. Prominence Is given in . the newspapers to reports from Che kiang concerning the movement for a southern confederacy com prised of Cheklang, Fuklen and Kwantung provinces to consoli date the opponents of the Peking government. Referring to Dr. Sun Yat-Sen's refusal to leave Kwang- tung, the war Detween rival mili tarists of Szechwan the fighting in Kiangsi and Changtso-Lin"s reviving strength in Manchuria the newspapers unanimously in sist the crisis demands that Pres ident Li Yuan-Hung act without delay. ADDITIONAL TARIFF ON COTTON CLOTH PASSED Washington, July 17. The 12 per cent addtiional tariff duty on fancy woven cotton cloth was ap proved today by the senate, 34 to 23 after an amendment by Sena tor Lenroot to reduce it to 6 per cent had been rejected 33 to 24. GRAVE CRISIS XiSTS IN CHINA 'MMm MILES PLEDGE LOYALTY AND FURNISH $1 000 BOND TOEMPEROR NOT TO KLAN Business of order all liam J. Simmons and not in name of organization Author tells how he became a member and his ex periences as an organizer First effort in a community is to get the mayor, the sheriff, his deputies, and the police department so as to tie the hands of constituted authority; telephone, telegraph and railroad people are also sought. By HENRY P. FRY, (Copyright 1922 by Small, Maynard & Co.; Published by arrange, ment with "author and publisher.) CHAPTER II . Joining the Ku Klux Klan . My first intimate contract with the "Invisible Empire" took place in upper East Tennessee, a section of ths.. United States where one would least expect such a movement to take a definite foothold. There is practically no racial friction whatever in this section. The negro population is not large, and the negroes themselves are orderly and well-behaved people, industrious and well liked by the white peo ple. A remarkable thing about East Tennessee is the scarci ty of Jews. It is very doubtful if a careful search of the en tire fifteen counties would to fill a synagogue. There is likewise a paucity of foreign population, for, with the exception of a few Greeks, the foreign element seems strangely absent. It is also remark able that in this section the Roman Catholic religion does not seem to have been able to take root. While there is a small Catholic Church in Johnson City, and one in Greenville that is opened but once a year, the other places have few, if any. Catholics in them. It is doubtful if one could find in all America a group of people who appear to be more over whelmingly Americans or more uniformly Protestant in their rehegious views than SERVE 60 DAYS WITH $350 FINE Billie Moore of Silverton, jwho pleaded guilty in the Salem jus tice court this morning to a charge of manufacturing liquor, was sen tenced to Judge G. E. Unruh to serve 60 days In the county Jail and to pay a fine ot $350. Moore, who was asleep when a raid was made on his place near Silverton Saturday evening, was taken into custody by Deputy Sheriffs Walter Barber and Bert Smith. They found In the house a 30-gallon washboiler still, in operation and about two and one half gallons of liquor, they said. Belfast, July 17. (By Associ ated Press.) Reports reaching here represent the city of Cork as suffering grevlously at the hands of the republican Insurgent forces. who are said to be in absolute con trol. The port of Cork has been closed, it Is said, ships not being allowed to enter or leave,, business premises have been seized and their contents appropriated for the republican troops, many of whom are billeted with civil ian inhabitants and several thous and people are out of work. Moreover there has been an out break of robbery and destruction, according to refugees arriving here who have been Interviewed by reporters for the BelfaBt Tele graph. AMU the Klan conducted in name of Wil in Tennessee. disclose enough Jewish neoole the inhabitants of this section.; In January, 1021, I was sfcnt by a Chattanooga business house with w-hich I had been connected for some time, on an extended trip through East Tennessee. In February I arrived at Johnson City ,intcnding to make that my headquarters and visit the other towns, which are easy of access. Early dn March 1921, I noticed a younjr man of pleasing personality but I had never talked with him until the morning of March 1(5, when we were thrown together at the breakfast table. "What are you selling)" I asked, taking it for granted that he was a traveling salesman. Ho looked at the Masonic em blem I wore on my coat, smiled and (Continued on page eight) NORTHERN ROMANCE COMING TO THIS CITY An intensely interesting ro mance of the great northwest will be the feature attraction at the Bllgh theatre on Tuesday, Wed nesday, Thursday when, "The Heart of the North" is given its premiere in this city. Roy Stew art, that sterling actor, and Miss Louise Lovely the Australian artist are featured. Harry Revier, who has super vised some of the moBt success ful American photoplays, includ ing "The Return of Tarzan" and "The Son of Tarzan," directed the picture. , Edward Dowling who wrote "The Heart of the North" with Roy Stewart in mind for the fea ture role, is the author of many successful photoplays, among them "The Greatest Love," fea turing Vera Gordon of "Humor esque" fame. Bamzen Leads Shooters Glencoe, 111., July 17 Cene Sar- azen or nttsourgn took tne ieaa among the early finishers by shoot ing 63, two under rRr in his after noon round. This gave hha a final 72-holo total of 2SS.