f.i r" h ih H H h i! il.ti 1 TT 4 it ii 1 VOLUME XI. GRANDE UNION COUNTY, OREGON, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 1911. numdi:r c.) 111 1ESL1 IW,ED n SLEUTHS SEE PASSED FORMER U. S. DEPUTY ACCUSED OF TAM ' PEEING v' v' MAN WHO RECEIVED MONET ARRESTED; I1IGHEB UPS NEXT Sensation Dae to Come la Arrest of One for Aattempting to Bribe He Samara Jurors Higher. Ups Said te Be Next tn Line Darrow ig Si lent and District Attorneys Has Lit lie to Say. TWO HOGS WEIGHT 1,150 POUNDS. Los Angeles, Nor. 23. Detective Brown, chief ot detectives of the dis trict attorneys omce iuujr, nolJ Bert Franklin, former deputy Unit ed States marshal and chief Investi gator for the McNamara defense, and charged him with attempting to bribe G. N. Lockwood, a prospective Juror, to hang the Jury. Brown stated he and two other detectives saw Frank lin pass 500 to Lockwood on the street this morning, He had been watching for some time. Lockwood was arrested. ': . ': ' : ' " ' ; " :; ' . ''; Brown said be was cognizant that an attempt had been made to inter fere with the talesmen. He said when the actual truth Is known, a sensation that will parallel the original arrests of the McNamara will be sprung. It was hinted by some concerned that the veniremen had been ."planted" in connection with this case and that the tatew ill try to prove that this was Jkme by perscas near to the McNam ara 'defense.'- Brown said it was paid as "earnest" mone on a (4.000 bribe to hang the Jury. . - nigher Ups" In Danger. - , Arrests of 'higher ups" are impend ing. Franklin is only a go between, it is said. Attorney Fredericks will not talk, and Darrow denied absolutely that the defense was in anyway connected with an attempt to tamper with the tales men. He Intimated he considered It was maybe a plan to influence the pub- lie opinion and said he wouldn't talk until he had investigated.. Lockwood was drawn as a member of the eleventh panel but hadn't been actually served with a subpoena. A man named "Cap" White, a broth er of the former sheriff was with Lock wood, and was "also arrested. They were Bweated but later released. No charges were filed against them. - Attorney Fredericks says White made the actual payment Fredericks displayed the money passed. There was $4,000 in bills of large denomina tion. He said he could trace all of them from the time they were first paid out to the various actors in the case, and showing Just how they came Into Franklin's possession. He said Franklin will be prosecuted. It Is generally believed that Lockwood will make a complete statement Brown said the defense attorneys are not im Defense attorneys stated positively that the only connection Franklin had with them was en an Investigator of v ' .Two porkers that weighed 1,- 150 pounds were brought to La Grande and sold today by the La S Grande Investment company. One & j was much larger than the other and would probably Up the beam $ at 625 or 6 50. ; .The second was 4 above the ordinary size by far. At about 6 cents per pound the two hogB would net fully as much as a choice steer. The hogs were rats- ed on the La Grande Investment $ 4 Co.'b ranch, and were fod corn 3 "wheat,peas and other convenient 3 and suitable swine food. , The $ cost of fattening has been slight Indeed. . Large porkers are not uncommon, corroborating the oft made assertion' that the famous mortgage raiser 'is a profitable side issue to ranching here. J ' t l r- r n'EullliilliiSlii li; . . "ii SiWW:.;?r: ii r -11(11 it ilii' nnnn th nr. i ,,,u WEEK'S FIGHT L-V s ! . i REBELS STORM NAN l KING AND CAPTURE STRONGHOLD. : IMPERIALISTS DIE AT THEIIt GCJiS thm nmnectlve jurors which is con sidered 'legitimate.';' Franklin's mem orandum was taken from htm. Imperialists Thought to P Control of the Sltuatlor' $ Hankow Foreigners f and Jhey Are Barlr hk Fight ShonU V V BPVYELI 4f At , Fln k Oc- , ear. Shanghai, No ed the Nanklr! tured them aK, .ebels rush .OD8 and cap- IISJEEDE HOKE SUPREME JUDGES NEEDED OE AM APPELLATE COCBT Would Abolish Office of County Judge In Realigning Courts of State. At the annual meeting of the Ore gon State Bar association held in Portland last Week.Judge ?J. L, Piyos. of Portland was elected president and Colon R. Eberhard, of La Grande, was elected vice president for the tenth Judicial district comprised of Union and Wallowa counties. Addresses up on legal topics, by eminent members of the bar comprised the set pro gram largely. , ' : An outline ot the work so far ac complished by the committee ap pointed by the governor under legisla tive authority to suggest changes in the judicial system of Oregon was presented to the . bar association. The commission so far has definitely de cided upon but one provision, that of abolishing prosecuting attorneys for districts composed ot one . or more counties and. the substitution of a county attorney, elected In each coun ty. To take care of the large Increase in the number of appeals and great er work imposed upon appellate courts in law actions under the recent consti tutional amendment two remedies' are before the commission: first, the ad dition of two more members to the su preme court, which would then . di vide into two departments with ; the chief Justice acting in each so that there would not be two lines of au thorities, and, second, the creation ot an intermediate appellate court, the decisions of which would be final. In a certain class of cases. In this event no additional supreme Judges would be needed. : " " The commissioners reported that mmm SCOJT DISTRICT Qj .rdest battle of imperialists and 500 rebels were killed in the last rush. More than: 30,000 were in the last assault. . Fearing annihilation the imperial ists stood by their guns until overpow ered. The casualties for the last week are not less than 3,000, Dispatches indicate the rebels met a crushing defeat at Wu Chang Just be low Hankow and it is believed the Im perialists again nold Hankow. Han Yang , was captured by the imperial lets wtilch is very, near Wu Chang. Foreigners are facing a critical situa tion and have barricaded the streets leading to their concessions and have mounted Maxim guns for a desperate resistance. It the threatened anti-toi-elng uprising occurrs, they -wouldn't have much chance. . Brooms to Cost More. ; V J -Chicago, ' III., - Noig.-There ap pears to be little prospect of immedi ate relief for the housewife who com plains that she has to pay twice as much nowadays for her brooms as she did a few years ago. According to the members of the National Broom Manu facturers' association, who began their annual convention at the Palmer house here today, the steady advance in the price of broom corn renders it impossible to '. lower the price of brooms., ' Canadian Club Banquet Boston, .Mass., Nov. 28. James K. Flemming," prime minister of New Brunswick, came to Boston today to be the guest of honor and principal speaker at the annual banquet of the Canadian club of this city. j. , mil I 1,1 ,l 11 1 Ml 1 7 7,7 '.'Jl'i ' U ADMITTED KILLING OF -SISTER" MA ECU AM AT TRIAL TIckHab.' Job Faces Grand Jury . Prayers for Easy and Quiet De&Ui , Answered and Now Those Who Car. ' ried Out Euthanssla Pact Xost Stand TTIal and Answer, for Their Act . . , .. 9 J? zmi ? ' Foreign Corrpondenci "Of late th nultan ktapa himMlf within ths palaee, being In constant dread and fsar of SMination or suddan doeth." (. Rhi In 8t Paul Pioneer Press. Ill USED 15 "UP!" SCATHING DENUNCIATION OF MRS. PATTERSON HEARD. Case Goe$ to Jury This Evening Wo- . maa Sobs Throngta It AIL Denver, Nov. 28. Quoting Kipling's "Vampire" as the keynote of his case against Mrs. " Patterson, Prosecutor Benson today delivered the most scath ing arraignment of a woman ever heard here. Afterwards the Judge de livered Instructions which favored tho woman. Benson ridiculed her sugges tion that she was unsophisticated when she met Strouse, the millionaire to whom she alleged Patterson 'sold her for $1,500, and denounced her life while the defendant sobbed. At the climax he shouted: "She murderet Charlie Patterson's body, tut thank God his soul was beond the reach of her infamy." ' The case goes to the Jury tonight. I llfl P 0 RTflfi CS TDU GRANDE For the purpose of viewing other cities of the northwest, seeing what is doing in the way of development, and incidentally to attend a meeting of the the Retailers' convention at Medford In the middle of January', a plan was set on foot last evening at a board meeting of the Commercial club where by at least 35 people from this city and Surrounding country will go in special cars to all Willamette valley they had also two propositions under!an1 Southern Oregon towns of prom!- consideration regarding, the , trial INADEQUATE FIR APPARATUS RE TARDS FIGHT. Many Workmen Homeless and Loss Is a Heavy One. Portland, Nov. 28. Nearly threo courts. One, which is not highly fav ored,, Is to greatly reduce the Jurisdic tion ot the Justice courts transfer the higher Jurisdiction thus taken from the Justice court together with a large part of the petty Jurisdiction of the circuit courts, and also all pro bate Jurisdiction to a court to be cre ated and presided -iver by a county Judge in each county, who must to an admitted attorney practicing in this stale a ret tain r'jmber of yaara; ap pep'.s to H directly' to the supreme .nirt. the ume as from the clr?tU court The favored plan is to abolish. nence. A banquet is being aranged to take place on Monday evening, Dec, 11th, mere win be snort talks from man' prominent citizens on La Grande- future outlook, enumerating (he proposed industries that seem certain and offering solutions tor conditions that might be bettered. The night of the city election was selected because It is generally known that business men are anxious to hear the returns and count on staying up late on such an occasion, i 1 Committees have been appointed and work will begin at once to prepare for what is believed to be the biggest get together gathering La Grande has had IKICETS united nnnsT BROTHERHOOD MEETING LAST NIGHT STARTS PLAN. for this purpose and at the banquet for many months. county should have one circuit, Judge, a county attorney and denied the in case the entire probate Jurisdiction right of a larger county to say that a is transferred to tha rlrrnlt jnurt. vi.aw -vw was made by Attorney Colon R. Eber hard. He explained from experience in an interior county before a railroad entered it how difficult it had been to get the circuit Judge to try accumu lating cases except at the stated terms held twice a year, and argued that with the greatly increased work of . ,v .s fount J:. !cautirely. transfer a:i : "lD - " i ..i nr u h nn in tne cirru.i - ..v.0o.v - court and aV .m ssloners' business estates, as well as the public business o -emaln as at present Trs plan would be sure to suffer, in the small originally called for a circuit Judge in counties, and by reason of the fact that each county, but It was thonght by the Judges would be so engrossed in some ot the commission that the smal- their own counties, it would be found ler counties should be attached onto impossible to give proper attention to the larger onea with one Judge serr- the accumulating work in the other mg both. According to a Portland counties of his district. He pointed weekly paper, the strongest attack on out that the principle seemed to be the the abandonment of W of eaca adopted Idea of creatlaf fireswept this morning by a blaze that aestroyed several frame stores ana ten residences, causing a loss of ap proximately 75,000.00. The fire start ed in a grocery' store. Hampered with Inadequate fire ap . paratus, the people fought with buck y et until two hours later when fire apj paratus, was received from tho city. Fifteen families, mostly workmen, are bomelesa smaller .but growing county was not entitled to the same privilege of speedy Justice and administration of its pro bate business. He is also reported af denouncing the abandonment of a concededly proper principle In the in terests of the supposed expediency of getting votes for their proposition in the larger counties. In this position, Mr. Eberhard was warmly supported Will M. Peterson, of Pendleton, who Is a member of the commission. As the commission has not permanently adopted any definite scheme, except as to count attorneys, Mr.' Elberhard thinks all interested in any of the mat ters should state their views to the commission', which seeks any and all suggestions that can be offered. Interviewing Commission to Be Nam , - ed Enthusiasm Widespread. . "Men and Religion Forwanl" irove ment discussions at a meeting of the Presbyterian Brotherhood last even' ing ' at the home of Attorney C. E. Cochran precipitated the first 'blow Btruck in the realization of an active Y. M. C. A. ill La Grande. Gret,t en thusiasm was worked up and men in fluential In professional, commercta' and religious circles of La Oranda are behind a movement that is to be spread until every order, associrt'on religious and non-religious is hitched to the Y. M. C. A, wagon with s wel' defined goal as the objective destina tion. While the irons were hot the correct action was taken when a diplo matic commission as it were, was or dered appointed by President Cochrau of the Brotherhood, to interview ev ery5 order, church, aid society, lodge, commercial organization and what not in the city. The aim at this time is to get all these orders looking toward a common end and to ultimately get a representative from each of the or ganizations 'banded into one genera' committee which is to devlso ways anj means.- . ',.-., . , .',.-, ; ,:.'...'. "Men and Religion Forward Move ment" Is in itself a life topic, discus sed as much as politics throughout the United States and it was during this series of discussions, '.ead by Dr. W. S. Seemann, Attorney Turner Oli ver, William Miller, Robert Eakin, Jr., Attorney. F. E. Llndley, : Attorney C. A. Small, Dr. J. W. Loughlln, Dr. H. L. Underwood, John Williamson, At torney C. E. Cochran and others, that, the V. M. C. A. propoganda gt a firm rooting and developed into oelng one of the most Important gatherings held In La Grande In that there Is every reason to believe the movement set on foot win . ultimately! result m a much needed Y. M. C. A. building and related facilities. Among the old Y. M. C. A. workers who were present and spurreJ the gathering on to action by warm ap peals for such a facility in La Crande. were Attorney F. E. Llndley, a Chi cago Y. M. C. A. worker, George H. Sutherland, a Walla Walla member ol land. . Realizing that a new building ir not probable within the next year or so some discussion has been gon into relative to fitting up Y. M. C. A. facli lties In some desirable location and increasing the membership under suei conditions and as soon as feasible, build the structure that would be a permanent home. the national association. Dr J. W. Loughlln, a Boston T. M. C. A; worker C. A. Small and others. ' ilmmee,' Fla., Nov." . 28. (Rarely Jl grand Jury In this state or else- , ere been confronted with a more ellcate and difficult ta?k than is the grand Jury wVrt tni aiue tod-iv to ' take up the casa nf the two Shakers. Brother E'ior; P. u .ifte an.l p.ster Elizabeth Sears, charged with wlllfu' murder for having caused the deaca of 'another memoer or tne onaaor . ony near Ashton, Sadie L. Marchant on August 22, last, by having admtnls- tered chloroform to her. More than ordinary interest Is at tached to this case and tOie action of the grand Jury will bo awaited with sympathetic attention throughout tho country, for the case in question In volves a striking example, of a con 11 let ' betwen humane sympathy and the law and places upon the grand Jury the burden of deciding whether euthanasia is Justifiable under certain conditions or must rigidly be adjudg ed a crime, no matter what may be tho surrounding conditions. ) Sister Sadie L. Merchant, one of the members of the small Shaker col ony which owns a farm of about 7,000 acres around Lake : Alligator, near ; Ashtor died ov August Jt after having suffered for BoC.e time from consumption. After her death it was rumored that her Shaker friends lad relieved , her sufferings, and, at her own request,, had "assisted her out of her torturesome W by administering chloroform to her. The matter was brought to the attention of the authorv lties and an investigation was made. Brother Gillette and Sister Sears, who had been with Sister Marchant at tho time ot her death, admitted without hesitation that they had helped Sister Marchant to a painless and peaceful death by giving her chloroform. ( Upon their own admission Brother Gillette and Sister Elizabeth were ar rested and brought before Judge Par ker for a preliminary hearing. They repeated their admission and added that they had administered the anaes thetic upon the urgent prayer ot Sis ter Marchant. They stated that Sis ter Marchant had for a long time suf fered from tuberculosis. ' One of her lungs was completely destroyed by, the terrible disease and the . ravages of the disease In the other lung caused the patient-excruciating pain. Sister Sadie had always longed for a pain less and peaceful death and, when the end approached and her sufferings be came almost unbearable, she p'aye? her friends to have mercy and to help her to a quiet and painless death. Up- V -.f (Continued on Page Eight) EXPRESS Till TIE DITCH ELEVEN HURT NEAR NORTH YAK IMA THIS MORNING. Nurses and Doctors Rushed to Scene From Spokane Cars on Side, North Yakima, Nov. 28. Eleven per son were injured none seriously ' early today when a Northern Pacific eastern express struck a spread rait near Wityato near here. Three Pull mans, a diner, a tourist, and a smoker were derailed and are on their, sides. , A special from North Yakima carried doctors and nurses. Most of the In jured are Spokane people. Among the injured were Brakemaa. J. B. McKenzle, Mrs. M. M. Sloan, Mrs. H. Hall, and Jack Kill, ail of Spo- .. : .:.-v. 1.-1