- To LV uvney jraers Allied Sold There li no substitute for CIRCULATION Dally average for October 6122. Member Audit Bureau of Circulation. Member Associated Press Full leaved Ireservlce,' FOK ft FORTY-FOURTH YEAR NO. 264.' Klan Unable To Gt Hold Here; leaders Make Fizzle Of Eepeated Attempts To Organize Strongly -V In Salem By Harry N. Cram -Handing out their yellow tick fets with one hand and applica- i tons for membership in the Ku I Kiux Klan in the other, the I Lilghts of the Knlghtle are again i jnaKlng tnemseives active in aa 1 lem. 1 1 If the yellow tickets bring them !Bto more votes than the applica tion blanks do members the klux- j er who have placed their money .j ftn Walter Pierce to carry Marion ' Jo'unty over Ben Olcott are going I jo carry slim purses and long i laces Wednesday morning. In the i jiast Marion county voters have I shown a strong Inclination to do ftlieir own thinking and resent I any attempt to force a slate down ;tkslr throats. The principal result of the klan's j Wtort to organize Salem and Ma- ; jpum county in tne realm or tne s invisible empire, an effort which 1 (pas been spread out over more ' jthan a year, bas been the creation t a public sentiment which .frowns severely upon the program jpi principles of the klan, or (Smiles openly at Jhe gullabllity of toe few who have been hoodwink ed Into joining It. ; The designating characteristic jOtlklansman in this part of the .state Is the emphasis with which i denies any affiliation, past or present, with the hooded organi sation. As in practically every Ar community the kluxers nrst organized here in the guise (Continued on Page Seven.) MILWAUKEE TO SPEND ' MILLIONS FOR CARS 1 Seattle, Wash., Nov. . 6. The jCMcago, Milwaukee and St. Paul railway has arranged to expend lore than $22,600,000 for new firs and locomotives to handle In creasing traffic, B. B. Geers of Mcago, vice president in charge ft operations, announced here to y. Orders -for new equipment Sow ready to be placed include 3W00 hostilities and coal cars to j? delivered next year, and 100 steam locomotives to be ready or iteration next spring, according J0 the announcement. HAMMER MURDERESS' MOTHER AN EPILEPTIC Is Angeles, Cal., Nov. 6 Trial f Mrs. Clara PhilliDs for the mur- of Mrs. Alberta Tremaine Mea- who wag beaten to death with hammer here last Julv. was re ined todav wit Tl- ""EMnrii, TT pmaony on the stand for the de fense. i.r- Anthony had previously testi ('" that he attended the mother ff the defendant Mrs. Hannah ' "'"i when she had an attack of tat he described as "epileptic lesions" on October 13, last. 35,969 want ads Totaling 172,530 lines ap Med in The Capital Journal ""n the ten months ending J, 122, not including tory td nd clas8itied d!re- "2116 t M'a over the same period 1 year ago. oSl tCifPltal J.ournal carr,M Ad. h" """ber of Want cuS8 pap" lB ib eld Capital Journal Want Ads Pay 1HW WifP V0TERST0G0 8 TOMORROW Sanity of Olcott Adi istration Expected Be Determining' Fi With Silent Vote. The zero hour is at hand .j At 8 o'clock tomorrow 3 i lng Oregon's legions of n id women voters will commence go ing over the top in a steady suc cession of waves. First will come the fanatics, the zealots of one cause or the other, who will spend their ballots without.material ef fects on the Outcome. They, also, will be responsible for the second advance, the supporting movement of the laggard electors who, driven on by the lnsistance of the zealots, vote to be obliging rather than through the sense of any public dutyt o be performed. Bringing up the rear, as always. but deciding the contest at Issue will be the massed forces of the silent vote. They are the reserves, the reinforcements that will turn the tide of battle, and In their bands Ilea the safety and well- being of the state of Oregon. Silent Vote to Decide. Shielded by its reserve from the bitterness, prejudice and enmity lngendered during the campaign of the past few months, the silent vote will be cast in the sanity of deliberate premeditation, and aft er an impartial and uninfluenced sifting and weighing of the evi dence both$ro and con. As should be the silent, sane vote will de cide the election. Never before In the history of the state has first interest been so equally divided between two con tests in a single election. The governorship and the compulsory school bill share evently in the public conqern of the outcome. and this because the campaign bas (Continued on page eight) SOVIET FIGHTS ALL SOCIALIST PARTIES Petrograd, Nov. 6. Address ing the delegates of the third In ternationale, which opened its fourth annual congress here last night, M. Zinovieff, of the soviet central committee, declared that the chief aim of the communists in the future will be to fight all other socialist parties. He said he considered them as the reaction ary force of international bour geosie. "We guarantee the proletariat of the world that sooner or later we shall bring them to the ex pected goal," he said. "Russian workers impatiently await to see the first spark of the uprising blaze in other countries." MILLER" AND SMITH pinn m iiiiiumf ' tAuH bLAliVl lib I UHTj New York, Nov. 6. Rival party workers in New York state snnr- red to unusually, energetic labor States senators from central states by the bitter contest for the gov- seeking re-election. They 'are: ernor ship between Governor Mil-' Republicans: Townsend, Mlch ler and Alfred E. Smith, his demo- igan; Kellogg, Minnesota, and cratic adversary, were carrying on LaFollette, Wisconsin. . the day before election battle si-' Democrats: Hitchcock, Nebras lently and doggedly, each side en- ka; Reed. Missouri and Pomerene, listing th aid of hundreds of Ohio. women throuth the state for the Lynn Tvum. former non last hour drite. , Prtian W governor o North The claim of the democrats that Dakota bears the "DuWkan Smith's vote la greater New York Ubel in that state for the Me- wlll greatly overcome the govern- Cumber Mat. - or's upstate plarality, has aroused E KoT e (By the Aasociat city republicans to extended ef- pMraeeUti and nationalist torta. 1 )uW today at Taiantoj in 600th- The wounded woman i. th.'eartera -Italy over -om mother of four married daughter, el politic la t. fight wta. two of whom lire In Jacksonville, wed aev, wv. kbted one in Ban Frtneis and cm wadJ. f"nu Camas. Wash.! fered by both .. 1 FORMER KAISER AND BRIDE WHO WERE .1 OF JOURNAL TO Politics is adjourned. Tonight the campaign for can didates and measures to be passed upon by the voters of Oregon to morrow, the bitterest and most in tense in the history of the state, ceases. Tomorrow the predomi nate question will be, who wins? Public Interest is at fever heat, and from the time the polls close tomorrow night until the last vote has been counted there will be a demand for election news never before equalled. To fill this de mand The Capital Journal will have an organization for gather ing and dispensing election re turns unequalled by any newspa per in Oregon outside of Portland. From the time the polls close until the last contest has been de cided The Journal will supply the people of Salem and vicinity the latest, most reliable and complete returns to be had. In addition to a special staff of election workers in the office and throughout Marlon and Polk counties. The Journal will e equipped with a special leased As sociated Press election wire carry ing bulletins on the trend of the count In every section of the -state. As fast as returns are gathered and compiled they will be an nounced to the crowds in front of The Journal office and posted on the bulletin board. They will also be available to all persons making inquiry over the telephone. N TO BE ELECTED Chicago, Nov. 6. Senatorial ramnalens in nine suties ui iut 1 . 1 4V middle west end today as the is- sues in tomorrows off-year elec- tion go to the people. The windup finds six uniiea ' V u J - v : -JiL'.'. " ,r. ,rl ELECTION BE UNEXCELLED INE SENATORS MIDWEST salem, : Oregon; monday, November 6, v., Screen Of Secrecy Veils Wedding Of Kaiser and Princess Doorn, Holland, Nov. 6. (By Associated Press.) The German ex-emperor and Princess Hermione of Reuss were married Sunday at the house of Doorn. This second venture was m strange contrast with that day in 1881 when, as crown prince, he wedded Augusta Victoria daughter of Grand Duke Frederick of Schleswig-Holstein. Several of the offspring of that first union were present today to set the seal of family approval to the new alliance. There were two ceremonies, a civil contract drawn up and signed by "Wilhelm II" and "Hermione, Reuss," as they af fixed their names; the second, a religious ceremony conducted by the ex-court chaplain, Dr. Vogel, according to the Lutheran rttea. The air of secrecy surrounding the entire affair bas been well maintained throughout., The climax of the systematic mystifi cation adopted by the household came when the bride's sister, Princess Ida, who resembles her, successfully passed herself off as the bride at the Amerlsfoort sta tion, with an array of castle cars, whereas Princess Hermione left the train at Apeldoon half an hour early and drove to the castle un observed, those within the palace making ttiuch of this as a huge joke. At the religious ceremony which began with the singing of the Lutheran hymn "Jesus Geh Voran," Pastor Vogel preached from the text "Now abldeth faith, hope and charity." The bridal couple occupied carved gilt arm chairs surmounted by crowns, while the numerous guests were seated in rows behind them. King Ee turns to Lodge Rome, Nov. 6. The king's re turn to his hunting lodge at Ban Rosso Ire, where he left his family when called to Rome by the recent fascist! crisis is considered evi dence that conditions in ""Rome are entirely normal. Which Ben Y. Olcott Religious Liberty and Equality. Constitutional Government by Regu larly Constituted Authority. - Demonstrated Economy. ' Straightforward Consistency. Practiced Tax Reduction Plans That Have Saved $1,600,000 to Taxpayers in Two Years. 4 Conservation and Rational Legisla tion . Insuring Continued Industrial Growth of Oregon. AMERICANISM. I MARRIED YESTERDAY Rsiords SJiqw Pierce 'Save Only $10 During War to Red Cross Fund Money contributed to the Red Cross during the war by Walter M. Pierco, democratic candidate tor governor, did not exceed $10, according to word received here today from Wal ter Tooze Jr., who 'Staged an investigation in Portland. Mr. Tooze'a probe was made following announcements by friends of Mr. Pierce that he had contributed the $1.25 an hour he received during the wax as a member of the Union county draft board to the Red Cross. He was said to have col lected $465 for this work. JACKSONVILLE WOMAN SHOT BY EX-HUSBAND Medford Ore., Nov. 6. Mrs. Josie Hoarn of Jacksonville, is in a seTious condition at the Sacred Heart hospital here as a result of having been shot in the abdomen yesterday by her husband Mei Hoarn, who subsequently snot himself through the heart and died Instantly. The couple had been separated for some time. Mr. Hoarn came to his wife's residence and an argu ment ensued in which Mrs. Hoarn became enraged and turning upon ordered him to leave. The man her shot her with a revolver. De Valera Stands Pat Dnblin, Nov. 6 (By the Asso ciated; Press) A long statement as a DaU communique and signed by Eamon DeValera as president, an nounces definitely that there is no truth to the rumor of peace nego tiations between lis party and the Free State government. Does Oregon iTlHf Til 1922 n MEMS Turkey Preparing to Seize Thrace And Occupy Port in Defiance of Allied Governments. Constantinople, Nov. 6. (By Associated Press.) The Turkish national government has handed a note to the allied high commis sioners here stating that the war ships of all nations must ask it for authorization to pass the straits of the Dardanelles, the Havaa corre spondent here has been Informed. They must also salute the new government of Turkey. London, Nov. 6. (By Assoclat ed Press.) As a result of the new situation created in Constanti nople by demand of Rafet Pasha, that the allied military occupation of the city cease, the peace confer ence called to be held at Lausanne November 13 has been postponed possibly for a fortnight, it was announced here today. British Position Unohanged, It Is stated in authoritative cir cles that in no circumstance will the British point of yiew regard ing the presence of allied troops In Constantinople be changed The British Intend to uphold the Mudanla armistice agreement and remain in the neutral zone with their troops. If the Angora government, how ever, desires to send civil admin istrative officers to Chanak, Galll- polls and Constantinople, there will be no objection, it is declared. So far as learned today the sul tan has not abdicated. It is be lieved the British authorities are taking measures to proteot him and the prince, his heir. There is a rumor here that the Kemalist plan to occupy western Thrace.- The Constantinople cor respondent of the Dally News re ports that fifteen thousand Turk ish ex-soldlers in Constantinople are under orders to rejoin their colors in ten days. The corre spondent says he understands their objective is western Thrace. Fear of bolshevik Interference appears frequently in comment here and there Is much specula tion as to the effect the action by the nationalists in declaring the sultanate at an end will have up on moselms outside of Turkey, es pecially upon moselms In India. FASCISTI ATTACK ITALIAN AMBASSADOR Rome, Nov. 6. (By Associated Press) Count Sforza, Italian am bassador to France was the object of a hostile demonstration by fas clsti when he arrived at Bussoleno in the province of Turin on the Italian frontier while returning to Rome for a conference with the new premier, Mussolini. The fas cisti detached the carriage in which the count was riding from the train, but carabiners rushed in and rescued him. Need? ORDER ALLIED WARSHIPS TO Walter M. Pierce Religious Bigotry and Intolerance. Invisible, Secret Government by Se cret Organizations. Demonstrated Extravagance. Conflicting Demagoguery. Theoretical Promises Backed by a Spendthrift Record That Would Actual ly Save Taxpayers Nothing. Radicalism and Freak . Legislation Discouraging Industrial Expansion and Crippling Development. COMMUNISM. PRICE TWO CENTS JUL TERRIFCEXPLOSIQH IN COAtKIINESHAFTENTRAPS BETWEEN MD 95IEN Feared all Entombed Miners at Spanker, Penn., Col- ; liary Dead or Frightfully Mangled Rescue Par ty Recovers Bodies of VictimsThose Still Alive Badly Burned Fan House Destroyed by Fire. Spangler, Pa., Nov. 6. Twenty-five bodies had been re covered at 3 o'clock this afternoon from Reilly mine of the Reilly Coal company near here, where an explosion occurred this morning. Six other miners had been taken out, some of them bo badly hurt it was feared they would not live. Rescue work under the direction of the United States inspector of mining engineers from Pittsburgh was proceeding. Srjantrler. Pa.. Nov. 6. (Bv rescue party to enter the Reilly this morning reported at noon today tnat tney nad iounq three bodies and feared that some if not all of the other 90 men entombed are dead. The rescue party entered the mine under direction of Superintendent O. J- Flanagan and had proceeded to the third entry on the right of the main entrance when they came upon the bodies. The dead miners were brought to the foot of the shaft. Spangler, Pa., Nov.e. (By As sociated Press.) A terrlflo explo sion somewhere In the workings in the Reilly mine of the Reilly Coal company here at 7:30 o'clock this morning entombed between SO and 95 miners who had gone to their work scarcely half an hour before. Superintendent O. J. Flanagan at once organized a res cue party from employes in the vi cinity and entered the mine. The rescuers came to the surface after their second trip into the mine but declined to give out any information. A second rescue party imme diately went into the workings. The rescuers were composed of volunteers chosen from hundreds of men who bad gathered at the shaft. ' Await Word of Rescuers. Silent groups of wet eyed" wom en and children huddled together close in the mouth of the shaft, mutely awaiting a gleam of hope from the miners who went down to search for their husbands and fathers. A steady rain was fall ing, but the women, many of them bareheaded, paid little attention to the weather. As the first res cuers came up some of the groups moved toward the company's of fice expecting that an announce ment would be made. The rescue party immediately conferred with company officials regarding the mass of debris which had halted their progress. One of the res cuers said he thought a fourth body had been found. The first two bodies removed from the shaft were Identified as Joseph Logue and Joseph Fries:. Shortly after these bodies were removed two living miners fear- (Contlnued on Page Seven.) Anonymous Defender Of Pierce s Record Is Answered By Tooze That" the person who disguised himself as "Fair Play" in sending a letter seeking to justify Walter M. Pierce, democratic candidate for governor, for accepting money for his services on the draft board during the war, which was pub lished in the Oregon Statesman of Sunday morning, used the anony mous signature because ha was ashamed to sign his name to an at tempted justification of so unpa trlcttlo an act, is the answer of Walter L. Toose Jr., chairman of the stats republican central com mittee. In a telegram to Walter L. Tooie Sr., chairman of the Marlon county republican committee, the THE WEATHER " OREGON: Tonight" and Tuesday "rain west; rain or snow east portion. Strong southeasterly winds. Local: Rainfall .01 Inch; max. 48; min. JJ; cloudy; southwest wind. ISSJST- ' r Z3: Lzi; Associated Press.) The first coal mine after the explosion RAILROADS MUST CHARGE FOR LEASES AMOUNT WORTH Washington, Nov. 6 Railroads which lease lands along their tight of way to private users must charge rentals equal to the sum which pri vate owners would charge tot sim ilar property, or the transaction thereafter will be considered by the interstate commerce commission as a form of rebating in violation of law. Concluding an investigation in stituted by itself in 1917 into rail road practices in renting property in New York city, Fresno, Cal., and Spokane, Wash., the commlslson held today that in eumo cases the fixing of a low rental charge In loses of lands to large shippers had been ''in practical effect" a reduc tion of transportation charges amounting to a refund. HUSBAND A.10YS HER, CLAIM WANTS DIVORCE That ber husband has harassed and annoyed her, that ho has failed to provide for her and that his treatment of her has been gengralr ly cruel and inhuman, are allega tions set forth in the divorce com plaint of Audrey A. Crowder against Max C. Crowder. Both are residents of Salem. Mrs. Crowder alleges that her husband has circulated false stones about her and she asks that he be restrained from molesting her. Mr. and Mrs. Crowder were mar ried here December 31, 191 They have one son of whom Mrs. Crow der seeks custody. state director of the republicans says: "You invite my attention to an article In the Salem Statesman signed 'Fair Play' justifying Wal ter M. Pierce for taking f 1.25 per hour for his services on the' draft exemption board, when most ev eryone else donated their services, by saying that Fierce turned the same over to the Red Cross. Such hyprocracy! Pierce was worth at least a quarter of a million dollar then and sold the wheat crop oft his Umatilla or Union county farms that year for o.ver $50,000. "The president In proclamation said this payment for draft board services was Intended only for men (Continued on Pag Ten.).