PAOTC TITO ITT TUEDFOKP MATT; THTBTTNK MEDFOTtP, OTiK(bN''''SATORTav;'"' 'OCTOBER ' 2ft 1922 MURDER ' TRIAL IS STARTED Bf T DEFENDAN T regular service for morning worship at 11 o'clock at which there will be obser vance of the Lord s supper and recep tion to new members with a brief uiessnKo by the pastor. At (:1j there will be an "equo" meeting of the dis trict Christian ' Kndeavor convention last Saturday and Sunday at Ashland by Phoenix delegates. The delegation of Phoenix was the largest at the convention and they expect a good meetlns from the reports. At 7:30 the pastor w ill speak especially to young I people on "Miracles Connected With the Hirth of Jesus." This is the first of a serioB of evening sernjons on "The Ileal Christ". upon an inquest and Mrs. Chrlstler was called upon the Btand to tell the story herself. Tin; funeral of (he dead minister will be held this afternoon at 5:30 in St. Mark's church, which he built. The body will be shipped to Auburn, X. Y., for burial, accompanied by -lrs. Chrlstler. llinhop Faber of the Episcopal church In Montana will of ficiate at the services and business houses will be closed for an hour. LOS ANGELLS, Oct. 27. Clara PhllPps electrified the court room in j which she is being tried for murder i today when she interrupted testi mony of Pecev Caf fee. her chorus Klrl chum, by stiffening in her chair ! received in football resulted in and saying: "Peggy, now tell the truth! You bought that hammer." Peggy turned from the jury and facing Clara shot back: "Clara Phillips, you bought that yourself! " , The testimony concerned purchase of a hammer with which the slate . contends Mrs. Alberta Meadows was slain on July 12 on a hillside drive Mrs. Meadows Willi 'Clara I'hlllln.? rnrt Peggy Caffoo, wont to an auto mobile park near the bank that af tornton and left In Mrs. Meadows' automobile, according to the testi mony of O. A. Cleveland and O. C. tlickok, employes of the station. ' After purchase of the hammer, Peggy testified, -Clara said: ,'. "Lot's go to 's room and got a little drink." . She said she and Mrs. Phillips went to a room, found a girl there but no liquor and left. They went to Peggy' apartment and Calar told tier that alio heard from neighbors that lior husband, Armour Phillips, was "going with another girl." Bho testified that Clara said that at times he treated her coldly and refused to talk with her. Anotluv l ootbjill Fatality. WASHINGTON', Oct. 28. Injuries the death here yesterday of Wayne How ard, 1G years old, ward of the- Na tional Training School for Boys here. The youth was carried from the field after making a diving tackle in scrim mage between two of the school teams a week ago. Ho was said to have ruptured an intestinal blood vessel. i. Phoenix Church Program Following Hlblo school there will be TONIGHT last time In which to seo tills exceptional screen melo drama HUMAN HEARTS with House Tutors and Ktllth Hnllor ' RIALTO TOMORROW HOOT GIBSON in "Step On It" Hoot opens the action (hrottlo wMo in his latest Wtvitcin, Riving you plenty of (run play, dashing hoino monHlilp, so mo minppy humor and a dash of love Interest. Stanford Leads O. A. C. COIIVALLI8, Ore., Oct. 28. End first period: Stanford C; O. A. C. 0. TIOER8 ARE DEFEATED (Continued from page one) At (Jenevn, X. Y., final: Hobart 54; City College of New York 0. At Uoston, filial: IjiKayctte 12; Huston college 0, At Ann Arbor, final: Michigan 24; Illinois 0. At Ames, Iowa: AnicH, 13; Wash ington 0. WIFE TELL8 OWN STORY (Continued from Page One) Hill county. Coroner Holland de clared that the facts of the case so plainly lndicatod murder by Mrs. Carloton and her suicide as to need no Inquest. Acted l.lko Mnnuic Coroner Holland in answer to In aulrles us to how Mrs. Carloton act- c2 when she went Into tho Chrlstler , home at 1 o'clock In the morning, 'stated that she acted like a munlnc. Mrs. Chrlstler had -told him whuf i happened in tho home after the wo ' man came in and preceding the shoot ! lug, the coroner said, but ho did not I think It concerned the public and that ho would not give It out unless the mother of tho dead woman insisted "Itishon Of Ail Outdoors" nUTTE,' Mont., Oct. 28.-r-While the Kev. Mr. Clfflstler was best known In northern' Montana, his activities had taken him to other parts of the state. He was a familiar figure at Helena, where, he served In 1909 as a member of the house from Cho teau county.- , . . When 'Mr. Chrlstler came to Mon tana the saloon was an established Institution. and gambling was not un common. .The. rector seemed to ac copt these things as part of the west; Indeed, be often was found In bar rooms with frlonds at all times of the night, and while be did not drink, he seemed to have patience with those who did. As a missionary, the Rov. Mr. Chrlstler took a pride In his work. Hts territory embraced a vast area from Glacier park on tho west to the North Dakota lino on tho east and from the Canadian lino on the north to the Missouri river on the south. Roughly speaking, it covered a ter ritory of GOO miles long and 300 miles wide. In it were the Little Rockies, the Hear Paw mountains and other regions notorious for the desperadoes they-had produced. Ho knew the remote camps well and visited them as often as his duties would permit Tho country appealed to him and ho loved the title "Illshop of all out doors," given him by Stewart Ed ward White In a novel which featur ed him. KING SIDES WITH ANTI-REDS (Continued from Page One) lo maintain order In the fnco of in surrectionary attempts. Reports recolved by the cabinet council from a number of points in central Italy show that the fascisti are extending their movement with a view to exerting pressure for the formation of a fnsclstl cabinet. The Facta ministry, despite its res ignation, Is acting with energy to re establish order. THE NIGGER IN THE WOODPILE. While no one questions the personal honesty of Mr. Lindas, it is nevertheless quite evident that he has allowed himself to be come the dupe and tool of men who nru attempting to servo their own personal selfish interests at tho expense of the city. Every one Jtnows that Mr. Lindas' principal supporters have been cn Rntfed for several years past in attempting to destroy the city's assessment liens and to escape payment of the amounts due the city on account of city assessments. , To this end they conceived the notorious Medynski plan and have fought through the courts every effort of the city to collect its assessments,, Lindas having been their attorney in u largo part of this litigation. .. And' now they are particularly anxious to gain control of the city in order that they may sell to tho city for a large amount an alleged water right of Uig Uutto waters. Investigation has con vinced the mayor and city council that this water right is abso lutely worthless, is wholly illegal ant valueless. ' This is the opin ion of every attorney who has investigated tho matter, and those who arc attempting to foist it on the city know they can never hope to get any of tho city's money for it from Mr. Caddis or tho business men who aro candidates with him for tho city coun cil. Therefore, they aro attempting to defeat Mr. Caddis and elect Mr. Lindas. PUBLICITY COMMITTEE, BUSINESS MEN'S TICKET. (Pnhl Adv.) C. M. THOMAS AND THE KU KLUX KLAN C. M. Thomas, alleged iT.r.lai " republican candidate for circuit judge, imposed himself on the purtv ticket in the May primario3 very largely through a policy of "mum as an oyster" on a question then and now the leading political issue before the voters of Jackson and Josephine counties and the state of Oregon. In his principal primary campaign statement he proclaimed himself, i in unciuous pnrases. to oe open-minued and and of opinion absolutely unformed on the bed-sheet and pillow-case brigade then, as now, the out standing issue between the contending candidates for any office within the gift of the electorate to whom Mt. Thomas' pronouncement was addressed. True, his statement In qustlonsdld not name tho Ku'Klux Klan'; but bo other public or private offenders against the Institutions of orderly govern ment then, or since, stood within the obviouB meaning and intent of bis announcement proven beyond controversy by. their flocking in to his support. With six of their ringleaders since Indicted by name for grave" crimes, and sixteen more (making in their John Doe shoes, Candidate Thomas has publicly advertised precisely the kind of an "open mind" on the subject of their activities which they yearn, with a great longing, to have elevated to the bench. Witness the recent strenuous effortsof thefr counsel to havo their trials put over to the next February term Jot court! , f, Tho favored candidate went on record over his own signature in a fuli-; page advertisement of his position in the Mail-Tribune, flanked and fol lowed by some ninety others, unreservedly endorsing their champion's open-minucn siana in a symposium or signatures gathered In from the highways and byways and meeting-halls of Jackson and Josephine counties, no less than fifty of whom were members of or known sympathizers with tho Ku Klux Klan and as for the remainder of the list, it does not con tain tho name of any man or woman publicly distinguished, then or since. for condemnation of that band of midnight marauders. One of the first-; mentioned group of .Mr. Thomas' supporters on that noted occasion was so eagerly interested in the alleged beauties of the Ku Klux Klan ritual and that oath of allegiance to tho "Invisible Empire" about which Candidate Thomas is so eminently "open-minded," that he wasn't satisfied with one dose of it, but, following his first secret initiation in the regular course of business, he went back two months afterward and had another one, person- uny uuveiiisuu unu puunciy prociaimeu, so there could be no mistake about it, or any more concealment than there is about the public support of Mr. Thomas' candidacy by this conspicuous and widely-advertised member of the Ku Klux Klan. A tittle later, when the Ku Klux' Klan shocked our community hv an' audacious assault upon the dignity and security of the very position to . which Candidate Thomas aspires, by concocting and sending a threatening i lotter concerning his Judicial dutiea to Judge F, M. Calkins, the members ' of the bar of Jackson county voiced the righteous indignation felt by every decent citizen in a resolution condemning the outrage. This resolution ap peared in the press, followed by the signature of every member of the bar association then In the county, excepting only two, who refused their Blgnu-1 tures and one of the luwyers who so refused to Join in this public protest ' ugainst the Ku Klux Klan was Candidate C..M. Thomas. . j Later on, the candidate Tot judicial honors had another opportunity I to demonstrate tho quality of Ills "open.mlnd" toward the Ku Klux Klan, j when he actively supported the Klan candidate in the recall election engi neered by the "invisible" institution agaiimt Sheriff Terrlll, in an attempt to J foist one of Candidate Thomas' clients into an office everywhere coveted, tor ; obvious reasons, by the Ku Klux Klan. lie went so far in his desire to put Sheriff Terrlll out and his Klan candidate in, that he even tried to get the wife of one of Tcrrlll's deputies to vote for the recall ticket! Upon another recent occasion, Candidate Thomas again promulgated from on high his declaration of "opcn-mindednesB" toward the Ku Klux ' Klan and all of Its works (for what other Issue, what other organization, we ' ask again, calls for such a statement?) only this time he saw fit not to ! reproduce the numerous endorsements of his candiducy by Klan members and sympathizers and others which decorated his primary campaign publi cation. Upon yot another occasion, the cloak of "Invisibility" slipped off from Candidate Thomas' ample Bhoulders that never wore a uniform), when, in a public address before the Grand Army gathering at Rogue River he came out boldly in support of the Ku Klux Klan's pet piece of legislation; the so called "Compulsory School 'Bill," which no other professional man In Jack son or Josephine counties, not a member of or engaged in defending the indicted members of the Ku Klux Klan, has supported or defended, either publicly or privately. " . . ,; Hut over and above all else,- as evidence in support of the indictment which his own acts publicly draw against the truth of Candidate Thomas' published professions of neutrality toward the Ku Klux Klan, is the fact oi his frequent unconcealed association with known members and sympathizers of this Infamous organization; the fact that he mrmbers among his sup porters in this campaign, as in the primary campaign, precisely those per sons who are so known, to their everlasting discredit; (he fact that ho does not number In his list of hackers a single man or woman who has ever been distinguished by, aw , public net or statement that would identify such a one with the .opponents of this Insidious movement; the fact that every man and woman in (Jio two counties known to be actively and determinedly against the Ku Klux Klan Is to be found in the ranks of those Who aro contesting tho elevation to the judicial seat of this Pecksnit'flan ally of or ganized riot and disorder C. M. Thomas. ''.,' Mr. Thomas has tieeii active aB an attorney all of the time iu advising some of the members of the Klan, who were and are his clients, and who have been charged with taking part in the Klan outrages, upon the conduct of their defense, and he is thereby ulready disqualified from presiding over the trial o fthese cases. This is the secret spring of his desire to pre side at their trials and of their desire to have him in the Judgment seat. INDEPENDENT AMERICAN VOTERS LEAULE. (Paid Adv.) Since tho above was prepared for publication. Candidate Thomas, by his own public exhibition, has swept away every vestige of pretense that he is not intimately associated with the Ku Klux Klan, by attending ono of his opponent's meetings, nt Talent, uninvited and accompanied by a bodyguard composed of men hbtoriously affiliated with tho Klan, who, acting in con cert, and with the smirking approval in front of and facing the audience, with one or two of his Klan jackals beside him, publicly and repeatedly In sulted an old and respected citizen of Jackson county, Hon. Wm. M. Colvig. And when Mr. Thomas, at his own request, was accorded the courtesy of addressing his opponent's meeting, a courtesy which he flagrantly abused, he missed the most conspicuous opportunity that life will ever present to his experience to piny the, to him, unaccustomed part of a gentleman, when ho failed to publicly apologize to the people of Talent for the misconduct of his hoodlum escort. He dared not do it for they were his crowd, his Ku Klux Klun adherents and supporters; and nobody knows better the claims which that association and that support rivet upon him than doeB C. M. Thomas, tho Ku Klux Klan choice for circuit judge. Ho solzed upon that occasion, however, to address an audience gathered together by his opponent's committee's advertising, in a hall which that committeo had rented for the occasion; with the declaration that he refused to sign the bar association's protests against tho Insult to Judge Calkins be cause he did not want to have any act, opinion or relation of hts to dis qualify him, If elected Judge, from sitting aB the trial judge at the trials of the indicted members of the Ku Klux Klan and the actual fact is that HALLOWE'EN BOXING CARD GOLD HILL PAVILION , .TUESDAY, OCTOBER 31st 8:30 P. M. Johnny Siw' Carlson vs. Mokie 8 Rounds 128 Lbs. Ringside Joe Joe Blackburn vs. Walters 6 Rounds 145 Lb?. Ringside KID KENNEDY vs. ROY BR YCLEY 4 Rounds SONNY AUSTIN vs. BATTLING DAVIS ' 4 Rounds - - - Ringside, $2.00; Reserve $1.50; Balcony $1.50; General Admis sion $1.00 ; Children 50c. Tickets at Brown & Brown, Medford, Ross & Ross, Central Point, Bowers' Drug Store, Gold Hill and Irwin Cigar Store, Ashland. PLAN NOW YOUR PLANTING Of .Trees an4 Plants for the Season ' v ', '.' . , . ', ORDER RELIABLE STOCK FROM GOOD ASSORTMENT CARRrEDBY ' Salem Nursery Company 428 Oregon Bidg., Salemj Oregon. TIME TABLE EFFECTIVE SEPT. 25 MEDFORD-ROSEBURG STAGE 1 " ' DAILY EXCEIT SUNDAY - ' ' Lv. Medford 2:00 p. m. , . .. Lv. Roseburg 1:00 p: m. ' . " :?!': MEDFORD-GRANTS PASS STAGE DAILY EXCEPT SUNDAY -I.v. Medford 10:00 a. m., 2:00 p. m., 5:00 n. m. Lv. GrantB Pbbs 7:30 a. m., 1:00 p. m., 5:00 p. m.' SUNDAY ONLY Lv. Medford 10:00 a. m., 4:80 p. m. ; "' Lv. GrantB Pass 10:00 a. m., 4:30 p. m. We connect with stages for Portland, MarshXIeld and Crescent City. INTERURBAN AUTOCAR CO. Phone 809 ' M eetio at Ashland and Jac ksoeville Saturday Evening, October 28 At which time the political issues of the present campaign and the qualifications of the candidates will be discussed Hon. A. E. Reames Col W. M. Colvig and Col. E. E. Kelly and Porter J. Nef f will speak'at wiH at -Ashland--In the Armory Jacksonville .1 f "t