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I f i turxtca to $100,000 I ' y WmU $100,000? t VC CM England. I Cz"'7rnW Wiao Economy. La.CY ARTHUR BRISBANE ! KotiiJ today is really Important It: America except tomorrow's elec ti n. u Is most important to women. Hey tfst want their sous sent to H ir oa Ue order ol foreigners under miy Leo ' Nations. ; Next to women tbe coming elee ti ib is cost important to the work is puea who see lack ot .employment r sMIy ivancing. j Vou can prevent coal miners from at Iking by Injunction, but you can bi t keep factories from closing in Uit way. ?(.... 1 Workmen who vote for Harding wjl vote for a man whose thought ivryvday for four years, beginning M it March, wilt be. "How can 1 t Jkntericau workmen employed it. t:wi wages V v f tit isn't a transcendental thought, tt tOM please, but It will do more for Cij i. country than the other thought, jrw;cau f prove to the Ahkooud of I'll, the Nlam of Hyderabad, all tS iMaharmahs of India and all the VI jiyets of Mesopotamia that if there ii icytiiing In the United States they that they do not see, they have osl t to ask for it?" 1 ea to one on Harding. A million to'lae hundred thousand is offered. Koirily takes it. After all, one hun dr tkouaaod debars are worth keep tag ,(' There are no odds that would 11 (sir odds, for if Senator Harding Kvii ntil next Tuesday, he will be ai MnI president of the United States. Tbj.slse 6t his majority will amaze eseybodr; including Mr. Cox. j'Ulve you noticed this? Mr. Cox kfeafef,-, who j started out thinking he wajj -for the League .of Nations, Uia oots that he' Is ! against Article X an4 'promises ; that h would at once tfisftss changing it. If the man who Is f inning ior president as a League k$ Mat (atna against, the League tf j Btlon. ' niar i theaverge ntan io Ikak about lt? r I JU : - : u. "H gland, under the treaty of Ver saiU 4 retained th right, by. victory, ts I Hie all property ow ned by Uer-' mat I on British territory. Now EngUnd voluntarily abandons that "rtgj t to take private property, re turn ag to tbe ancient maxim "Gov erns ents. not the people, make war." V se England! If the fact were outs ektablitt'ued that private prop- cred ts and values would be de strojed, and the rvsumption of busi ness on a world wide scale, which is sbsasteiy essential to Kuglaud's wel- f A fW lL-t(1l I... IniiuiuulKIa . . ' at weaitn of Kngiauu. scattereu troia I'arU to I'ekin and from the Nort't to tbe South I'oif, would lose valw , if public war meant piivuto. ronfl aatim. Ca iforuia. aicurdiiig to a Cox news PT, has louti'ilmtfd only a little frt than, one thousand dolUrs to th ol campaign fund. The days n 1 one when cttritomttous and rich Btta routributed to both sidi-s that they Blight have a siring on each. Or perhaps Inteliscnt rich men and coip( fat Ion decided this year not to tmt lul to a million -to-one chalice. Th! lsritislt government makes. Mil SitrHSieitt with Its workmen to come Wk to work, gives tUeiu more, money with ( prtvatn pruiuUu of greater pi'ti- stisi. Over here we should proba bly tlf Hie Itijuiu tlitn. The ise Kug-l'i-h liave 1,-drniMl tliui fiUinllv ur- . rasgiineiit with w oik men is better Is k li.ng inn than th inobt maguili tat kijuottions. Th"- t.!t lltUK). nf the l ulled !! w hit b is neesar to keep l-k going and nun at work. Is faHli 4 off, g,j tt,r queer icasuii. Ot. niouey Hlamis in value above her luuuey in tiiH world. The aiwi be woith $ttl. n" U Wwrtk es than $ T.O. The '" aorth alx'Ut X cents, no '" t-nts. Tli mark out c ' , vents i rth t,t,e nu and a haif ' t nice for us. joii say? I tout m M ! Ul l, Thi Ait-iniu won't buy from ns. in Uear dollar if he can buy ikUm tutUnd and pay in rloap uiH s. ia dl uo ii r buying in Kiirf- laar or i.ei man v. aettiiiK theaii money 111 exchange for Inns. Ktie use tliem to buy O.f 11 Olll . Aarvic. 1 i"a-T-sm. rMk, mmr. . - ,w-r I, mmm J mbw ! Nswspape Enterprise . . ' " " : . - - - jd. ' - ,.aV"ia -. ; m ' Association. .TTT"' '"mil -m m iiinssBaasaBSSSBar " VOLPME SIXTEEN NO. 342 iiibL.Jliii FRO:.HVI!EI!CE THEY'LL C0"Ej WIIEHE'LL THEY G0i:030DYVILLKII0W That the great secret Ku Klux Klan will give a demonstration in Daytona tonight Is a persistent rumor that has been on the streets today amd while nobody seems to know anything par ticular about the matter, the fact that great demonstrations were held at Jacksonville, Tampa, Orlando and other cities in Florida Saturday night i lends color to the report that a repe tition of the event may take place in Daytona. According to the rumor and borne Out by the activities of the Klan in other places, an advance guard of two members ou horseback; accompanied by a herald, all dressed In the regu lation regalia of their rank and with horses jllsguised, ; w ill precede the main; body of men' by 'about, half an hour) It -is , generally ' eu8f,0Biary; for the 'advance "guard . to announce! that a demonstration is about to take place within t he next 30 minutes by a picked band of determined men and that no interference will be tolerated, and that all persons who desire to move their automobiles must do so before the parade passes and that during the parade no one wilt be allowed to cross the street or interfere in any way with the silent procession. Following the custom elsewhere the officers of the clansmen will be j mounted and the members afoot and I every clansman dressed in the reg'u- .llatiou costume of the order, In ad- dition to the members in the puradel many members of the Klan, it is said. u-ill t:,fl.,n t i,.m t1 titu fit uttfli Ti,,. way tntertered witn by certain per-1 sons who believe in negro equality and the negro in political matters. 3F III! Wi IM TO LEAD PAEifllE HERE IMIGllT . t . . " '. , 1 1 It ill be useless to try to usi ei -! Il'ie moved in seemingly scheduled tain the identity of the members or order, tn rough the principal down from whence, they mu; or w here 1 n strets, pas. Hamming park and they'll go. as precautions have already been taken, it Is said, to see 1 lint 110 one discovers the meeting- place of Hie pssemblago or tho place of ills biinilinent. The parade, it Is said, will be headed by the ll.iiulng cross, the highest symbol of tin- order, wliii h denot 's that the bearer and (he fol lowers aro pledged to fight to tlte death against the domination of Hie South or the 1'uited Slates by ne groes, or persons of foreign birth, re gardless of their nationality. The rumor of tin: parade has been lu-aid tu various quarteis today' but no continuation of it lias been ob tained, ulthoiigh it is generally known that onditioiis in Daytona are about as bad as any plai e In Flo) Ida mid there is evidently ninth work in hand fur the Ku Klux Klan, which order seems to have been reorganized on the sumo b.isH as it i"U"l tiuring the m-inorable Reconstruction days in the South. One Thousand March in Jacksonville. j The rsunday Times-I'nioli relat'-s It he manhlng of I he Ku Klu Klan Indent ii-uM t it v Saturday iiib, as follows: , , A -ile-it host, otled and Kot.-dj tlowilU white. fVeadilU 'willl diK-j niiv a.iisle tile tie- dovn-lovni street tree! n!il. i.f .lai k-onviile, mar. Ii-, la-t U, remind the people h"le that the South Is not d'-ad. j r'roi-l a point unknown to a point 'unknown, mule, imswei vltig. haltn.K sive, on horseback to warn the crowds of the Klan's approach. A two-note blast on a cowborn trumpet was tbe signal. The eerie tone reminded patriarchs of the days that were, when the South struggled against the forces of intrigue and oppression, when white-clad' figures fared abroad by night to right wrongs, to preserve traditions. About half an hour before the start of the demonstration, two couriers, mounted and masked, rode through the streets advising ' the public what to expect and advising against in terference with the movement of the line. These couriers, also heralded their approach by blasts on a trumpet. Thousands congregated. WhisQfrs ran through the crowds of Saturday night shoppers: "The ku Klux are coming!" The sidewalks were lined. The crowd overflowed into the streets, packed the thoroughfares to the car tracks until on Main add Forsyth streets traffic was almost entirely ex cludea; -ry.--. -r" J' Sign of the Crass. i ; Then from nowhere, it deemed came a plaze of ' light, a file of White clad, figure's. .The nainlua brfess ap proached.. Born by a stalwsr figure, whose robe of white whipped and bellowed' In the wind, the Klatt emi blcm advanced. Behind it came a file . of white figures each stately, each masked, each in no white dif ferent from the other. , Silently the phalanx marched. Th(?re were some who tried to count them, but gp.veup the effort. It was too much like "counting sheen" at j niht when sleep refuses to come. The filp seemed endless. With measured tread, at intervals of approximately eight feet, the Kiansiuen inarched. There was no word, uttered (luring the demoustra- turn. No man s features were visible, j An endless file of robed men. mys- Merlons, purposeful, it seemed, the to- nowhere. Signs Exhibited. "Wo were here yesteiday " "We lire here today!" "We will lie here forever!" Thus read signs which were borne by ligiirei distributed through the line. What did it mean? Who could say? Apai'iitly, fiom the comments of the crowds, here was a revlvilication ' of th'! Mouth's lulwark of reconstruc tion days, How long the Klan had exUled, who Its members were, whre it met. what it purposed doing -none could tell. Tin 11 1 ju into Main lret from Du val, up Main to Forsyth, theme north past Hemming park, east then to lio gau, then to -nobody knew. Some Maid a fleet of automobiles, each with ,1 hooded driver, with licence plate, removed, i.aited the arrival of the mnrihor. Some ttld the host dis appeared as if by magic Nobody .ein-d to know dllnltely what be- , aine of tin oiled flgurex, where the what their purpose Rumor Arc Vsr.fiad, Kiiiiiois that liavt; been 1 ill lent for ttie lal eerJ day wre utieil ! L..I ir.ni 'Klan a( ght wlo-n trie courier of the aieil mi tlie li,-.-l Where did tho-e riinioi onsluate? No oo ould or would s4 No tnan knew wlo-1'n r ill neighbor h Id member- liip ill t!l IIHte;ioU Ol It MiA.lt loll : whel.o-r bis own brother a .-,.i'r ;f t!. OI,e rlol 1111 No uia , ha-, I I. ' l' ' ' t' - .,. - , . I. f I lie !. '- DAYTONA. FLORIDA. MONDAY, NOVEP.!2l I, 1920 t:H7 SEtlATOriS V I Ff.Cr.1 33 STATES 3 4v' (Tho "O" or- "R" indicates party of senator whose term ex plro) Alabama (two vacancies) D. ArUoua D. Arkansas I). ' California D. Colorado D. 4 Connecticut K. 4. Florida D. Georgia V. 4. Idaho D. Illinois R. J. ? Indiana R. JL 1. Iowa? R. ? Kansas It. 4. j- Kentucky K. .J. A Louisiana I). ,U Maryland I). JL ? Missouri It. A 4 Nevada D. .1. 4 New Hampshire K. A 4. New York It. .5. A North Carolina I). 4 A North Dakota It. , A Ohio R. A A Oklahoma D. 4. A Oregon D. A ANPennsylvania It. A A South Carolina D. A A South Dakota R. A A Utah R. A A Vermont R. A A Virginia D. A A Washington R. A A Wisconsin R. A 4- i bi b m ifm io i meetings were held, yet, apparently, meetings had beep heklvjb Yet' tho existence of tbe Ku Klux Klan was made evident. . Older peo ple. In whose . minds still run the memories -of tha days 'of reconstruc tion recalled similar sights, "remem bered nights upagt, when the two tone tocsin sounded, when muffled boofbeats resounded from the high ways as horsemen rode to some mys terious rendezvous. They lived again the turbulent times when the carpet bagger fared southward, with his gos pel of "forty acres and a mule," w hen the glimmer of the flaming cross her alded the approach of the clansmen. The Ku Klux exists today, lust :ls 1 . 1 j u-u ti ' 1 i it existed in 1SiS. This is known ! In Georgia, atop Stone Mountain whose bald summit of granite in majesty cbove Hie city of Atlan ta, meetings have been held. Mys terious hundreds have roared through Beach tree road in high-powered mo tor cars- not lu hoof-beat cadence as In the days of reconstruction- lo'keep the appointment and to -answer the call to the cross. That, the Klan had extended its activities to Kloridu was not known. Theie had been tunioi-. naturally. But no man seemed i t have definite knowledge. ' Nep,i nera reoorteis. ambition-, (or ne. I have que-Hoiiei huii'lieds l;tiing tin I last weeks. "Is then; a Ku Kim 01- gatlUatlon heie.' live qm-lloli been asked. "I t.ia l mi ; I lout know. I have Ik-.i rl so; and I have heard it. deiiieil." t i - rcpln-i ii.ve m -vuiiahly teen. Who '-mild tei Then last night lain" th.- verilnit tiolt of these tumor- Tio- KUu e sistsi Its numb -1 ' W ho aii sa ".' Foi ill the line last liitfl'.t appi-.n'cil at least a tlioU.-and I'- m:,,(- U).- 1111:1c ber was greater: pn:.bl nii -o iniany. Still the ti i.-; wa- foi 1 And it ape a red a- ! i.itied tei iniiied a3 (m mid., i.i I Purpose of Klan' ' Then la-t nili',:. b de la red an lil,k:ewii wa.i- and .1. liainicd bin nieaice to I tie- chit .. T-t!;e-at ci-.p. appeared w hat dwi iaral lo'i of ri. Ki'i v K Sa-l l!t i I me 14', Uie K t! IJ.esi, U. 1 , I !l.Ml 111-I nil l i -fl, li,-."r of at? I ll,. a - iie- r i 1 T ie K l i e'Ope, Brst i. I !le.4e ..,.) t- i-f, a ! a -1 ' - ir h ..i,l ii it 4 i the put!! f Ui" I I t , , f .,!:,, . ii... i..-- . : c 1 TI'"rT OliilLO v.. 12. A ri hpt r 1 LLLUI LbLl ) (Tho letter "D" or R fcn cates party of governor now office.) Arizona R. Arkansas D. Colorado R. ' Connecticut -R, Delaware R. Florida D. Georgia V. Idaho R. Illinois R. Iowa R. Kansas R. Massachusetts R. Michigan R. Minnesota R. Missouri I). Montana I). Nebraska R. New Hampshire R. New York I). North Carolina D. North Dakota It. Ohio D. Rhode Island R. South Carolina D. South Dakota It. Tennessee D. Texas D. Utah D. Vermont R. Washington R. West Virginia D. Wisconsin R. V 7 i I ' 4. : A) V X ' 'sir -I--H--I-I-H HH-I-Hf- i supremacy against ail elements and bodies, foreign or otherwise, is men- tinnoit ioi ims, iu uriei, mpin-areu m ueciara- , . . non in pimcipies. m message came unsigned. The envelope was plain. without return address. "The Knights' ot the Ku Klux Klan are regularly J organized in Duval county, Florida." is more than one tbounnd. The Klan stands tor the principles as laid down ; In the charter of the organization. Its membership a composed o' reputable' men. determined that the traditions j of the SiMitk and of pure American-i ism shall be perpetuated." These were the statements. in' brief. Who sent tbeiri. where tb'" originated, none can av v But last night Jm hinviiie p-ji' twit ne.Hefl a demons) rutiou "( 'h' most .impressive nara n r Nole who t Satciled the parade e abi'- I'l I svfl It had been an air of piitpooe, an altitude of pot-". Ib uppi-ai ai 'of tiling not only thoroughly organ ized and property regulated, b it, i' , mt rolled. t Who compi i the Klan .' That, in the wirds of 1 to- n t. ! - la! O lleniy, '1- aitoiio r ii.i" a'.'i inii'l lik'-ly. one that SI i v. r Ic rtiitlell. '!' "ir-iy, appar-xHy. is the first piUi'ipb- of the oSa!il ! loll RED CROSS UHIT IN VIENNA DOING GREAT WORK AMONG THE POOR Toe &. rM j VIKN.VV Nov 1. Tt. .oi-r-...- li'-d (. "Jilt to r.- .ti'i-n: i v.-Uu. e tt.e I'll ;it: I -iid jiel -. fe, ;r,g rili.i'ii,' U.. tie (,,. .(,... Jk-. 1 id in. ...le s :-J 'i. ' ;.a - t. -f; : I otfte f, v I. l,at . i.lt I e : ! ft. .: -.j f - '. t -inSe.- .f ' i n I fc; - . n ra.-tr . -j . r !,! V. K- :TCr tjr sra' a, x i J - "yh' fgi: r fMrs. E. A. Crcnrlp 2 Lies at Death's DccA 'r at Baltimore Hozpilzl Mrs. It. U I). Graves, daughter of' Mrx. h. A. Branch, returned Sunday evening from Baltimore, whero she has been in attendance with ker mother, a patient at Johns Hopkins hospital in that city, for the out six. weeks. 1 Mrs. Graves brings the Informatiun -yimai tne atxtors la that insiitatloaj h.il.I nut lilt' Vr.n. f- Ik. ! of Mrs. Crimh. w ho has be B in fitjWFate health for serreai years. Doctors jtke j RrpuLicaa War r C pronounce Mrs. Branch as a suSemr jauate. wberem b mtcl t: t ot P''a, the dread Southern ka-! t tu FUnbJ ease, from which she has suffered M - told agony for some time. To add ti th lr,wl,U .hbt, k - i , na hd to b"r' b"ta"s lhe - J !ou illness ot her mother. Mrw. Grava: i rweived the information tht sa Br- , - , , , t , (self could receive no bla for her J eyes, with which sb t .. . , . . , . , Dies for some time. The dyntpatiiy of beach friend i extended to Mr. 'ranch and hi ta- !ly In their hour of tribulation. valuaclecc:::sof gold sTCiEii fh: TIIELISCCilUZinY (Tie AtoiatcS lr ) IJSl;N, Nor. I.-A lit hot if i ui ' Na! !i,f,.i! t.ibiaiv have teei Bs -it,! bv in,- faeft of ttmrt taan Iw go!! 1 tiitstituh:e ! Utu nn i. Miutj.- . s- f j mt '.n Tiit ',t t. thi tU- ti( a vt ad i .'iiat al! th- Hi'! i f. . re .f.. l-a'i ! t;j.' it.cf? w , f rUtltiV -i -r "f lis- !.:! -4IT. ar f'i.; ftrig-4 1 o.i-: I -.4? f.-:s i ' N.. -. 1 tin ttt., V. . S . t ' . r-pl.i rii I,!-.; ( it ,i. 1 1 1 1 ; 5 ' , '! it,' r : ' h.: J. I MILK SHORTAGE III PARIS EXPECTED TO BECOME MOST ACUTE Civ ti EL(KD TO SAVt WAR IU.k0 2 Ul r. of thm Daytca S,tiikcr3 f is a Judas Eacarsct the tratitoc of two go wbo betrayed ti C . ! few paltry pe.cs C i lrxtmtratedl by klr v Kt w t - . w. ' . I Vote mr i250 woiBcn md W c c tot tb txi C ' TVZSivmZ, L5 i . . ? ti umtUtm v;vo ckk.2 k. . . - , j - : pevoonatl ttk msv tim c the Umilf pxi '. ,1. idtjr raortunx tn kaa 4? 3 Spajkm mmtd; C ( ) of UVe fct thmt -m4 mL. ' acriheJ pwip-I- iw ' let the reop4 tc'..Z'r Cf not Ke Kjj K-. Ux mam sl ' rt ben lurnmn Krans nd CT.'j defeat OalHreatb for L. ...i er or n Spwktsuai M ncxotMitms; oicly cm ru ifn klf or wrhetrvrr re rtwri (ml "'men ru :Krr uf." the Dfe ?tsi is Uiinbl to y aai ai3 lawt iint trvr prplr A !nas couivfy. 1 1,-6- Mittt vKat k 5fa4i lM t-r1 j-r torn irmmm .Bjt! Us:: siimawy,as $f f !, THE MOVIES t A .- rr.r I k, . ,r. f . .-. a I.. ri-f i.i"4.r f jmi m " f " t, : 4 m -in- 't a fi;m (tmmm '!' ti'-fi tr trw HfjHaaiiatawa -!'. I - t- riffKNC fnn i ..c-fe i: I-,, 0. . t.f tri. --r U. Is::4 pf r,' . 4 , w - ' .- -t , ; , M - p, V 1 , III, w. , t . ; ' . TW'i l : - - , - : . .a.''-t-.i .-jf--: - ;-..-.. t a sirrt1 - i ; - ;.- - A lVf n -' - . Ji- I sy -. tor, . tralb(, demaii'lo.K aii r -1.0, .... I -a, ..'Ikc , III-: i.o f .1 U- K,a.. v,';1! tl:i','"i '.--.' ' 3" to so i,er it.il W tv tnul n,i nm r f t ;.,-,, t. ,. sis' h 1 11 11 1. I 1 ii