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About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (July 18, 1911)
TIIE 3IORXIXG OREGONIAN, - TUESDAY, JULY 18, 1911. WARRANT oe NORTH Corvallis Dentist Sought for Murder of Mrs. Griffith, Near Philomath. SUSPECT LEAVES HASTILY hnplolom I Arogwl Whm Man Is Orrhrd raring Hl Koom nd Moanlnc. "Oh. Why Did I Ho It?" Surprise) Srrrunjr. COSVALXl?. Or, July 17. Special Fdward North, a dentist. Is charsed by t?je state with tha murder of Mr. F.liaa Grlfftth at Philomath. A war rant tor North's arrest haa been Issued ati'1 officers are ararrhinK for him. North left PMIomatb yesterday, os tensibly for Tortlan.L hut did not pass tbroiich Corrallla. and It U oellevecl that he went to the. coast. While th Shertff and deputy prose- rntlns; attorney will not disclose tha rature of t.'-.e evidence that Implicates North. It la Lamed that suspicion n first directed toward him when tha minister at who house ha waa stay In la rhllmath heard him walking tha floor a few nlehia aa-o and moan Inc. "Oh. why did I do It?" Tha Investigation hera haa been con- tucted ao quietly that North a accusa tion comes as a complete surprise, and It was only yesterday that North learned that ha was suspected. North Is a (ravelins dentist, but haa mada tin home In Philomath for several months. Ma Is shont 4rye,r old. Ha lived at Corvallis a hen a small boy. Dick Broomftred. a friend of North'a. Is held as a witness for tha state under bond of J10. but ha refuses thus far to maka any statement. Rotlr loand In Tuntl. Mrs. Klisa J. Griffith, a widow, was murdered at bar home n-r Philomath on tha nijcht of Friday. June 1. Her body waa fonnd tha following day In a shallow pond quarter of a mile from her home. On June the Coroner's Jury Investigating the crista found that Mrs. I'rUAta was killed by strangulation by persons unknown to them. The ransacked appearance of tha widow's home wtlh contents of bureau drawers scattered on the floor, furni ture thrown about and open empty pocket-bonks and papers topsy-turvy la tha rooms caused tha belief that murder was committed with robbery as tha motive. Tha day before hr death Mrs. Grif fith had sold her farm on which sha waa ltvlnc and which sha took as a homeatead XI years alto, and It was renerallly known In tha neighborhood that sha was to receive $1004 In cash, besides mortnt notes. Bha bad re ceived tha money and deposited It In tha Philomath Rank. Tha certificate of deposit waa found arsons' tha scat tered papera. Children Rmlde in Portland. Tha body waa fully dressed whan dis covered, but tha hair was down and hairpins and comb were found on a dresaer at tha boose. It l thought from other Indications) that Mrs. Grif fith was preparing to retlra Friday night whan attacked. Abraalona on tha wrists and back and sides of tha neck were caused, according to tha attending physicians, by ropea and a length of ropa waa found partly under tha body. Mrs. Griffith was a highly-respected woman, active In church work. Mrs, rraig. Mrs. Ella Hoffman and Mrs. I'.Unrh. Hoffman, daughters, live In Portland, and another daughter. Mrs. Utile Fruit, resides at Sheridan. A son lives at philomath and a brother. John '(, at Newport. 0 POLICEMANRESCUES BOYS VoutliA Cllnglor to Canoe Ipse by Wave, Saved Just In Time. Tha timely arrival of Patrolman Crtslra with tha Harbor Patrol boat saved George Farnsworth and Frank Unhauer. each 1 years old. of JS4 Ross street, from drowning In tha Willamette River Sunday night, when their canoa waa capslied by wavea In the waka of tha steamer Monarch. Grlstm recog nised tha canoe aa an old derelict with a broken bark tMat haa been capstsed several time, before, resulting In near drowning. Tha canoa was tied to tha Harbor Patrol and when tha poltca boat reached tha dock. Grlslm hauled tha canoa ashora and chopped It up with an ax. Tha last wreck of tha llt-fated canoa occurred several hundred yards below tha Steel bridge. Tha Monarch "was coming np stream. One of tha steam er's waves struck tha old shell and It turned turtle. Farnsworth and Ma haner managed to catch hold of the overturned boat and clung to It. Passengers on tha Monarch saw tha accident and hailed tha Harbor Patrol, which was running alongside, and tha rescuers hastened to tha young men. Both wera nearly exhausted and could not have hung- on much longer. JEWELS AND MAID GONE Ixm AngclfM Police Think Absent Servant Can Ksplaln Robbery. I.OS AXOBLE3. July IT. .Jewels valued at $T50i). stolen last night from the reatdenca of Joseph Metsler. a wealthy Los Angeles real estate dealer, ara sought by tha local police, who tolled anavaollngly all day today on several clews. Mostly they ara Inter ested In tha whereabouts of Helen Heese. maid at tha Metsler home, who left the house last night and has not returned. The Reesa girl was left alone In tha honse while tha family went out. Re turning from tha theater near mid night Mrs. Metsler found her jewel ras scattered on tha floor ar.d all her Jewelry ml'stng- Aa nearly aa could ba learned tha maid left tha house be tween T:J0 and :J0 P. M. Tha police not only hope to solve this puialo. but clear up soma Eastern hurglarlea committed under nearly Identical sltuatlone. Including one In Washington. I- C. where tha loss amounted to tlO.OOO. FALL WHEAT IN NO DANGER Hot Weather I Fast Ripening- Grain in Eastern Washington. SPOKANE." WasV. July IT. - (Spe cial. Inland Umpire towns today suf fered under tha most intense heat of the Summer, but despite the torrid day. .pioneer fannaia aay hot wind anJwx- restive heat will have no effect on the hardv Winter s-raln. Spring wheat Is said to be in danger. Walla Walla ranchers predict a falling off In tha Sprlna yield. Spokane official thermometer regis tered i degrees at a o'clock. Down town thermometers recorded 101 to 107. Tha mark breaks tha record for this year. Palousa and North Idaho soil tillers welcome the hot wave following immediately tha excessive rainfall. Wheat la ripening fast and harvest will ba on In full blast. In another week. Crased by tha heat at Waltsburg. Ed Buerher. a farmer, eluded his daugh ters and son-in-law and attempted to enter the home of Arthur Roberts. lie waa driven away and then attempted to awing In the hammock with a party of women at William McKlnney's home. Ho was later taken In charge by Maurlra Land, his son-in-law. At Wallace, surrounded by wooded hills In tha Coeur d'Alene district, tha mercury touched 5. a high record for the year. Pullman reports 100 with a slight breese. Elberton, In the Palousa country, sweltered at 7. tha hot rORTI.An M1 Wll.l. AID I cihi ihukjatiox SYSTEM. D. C. Heaay. D. C. Henny. Consultlna; Engi neer of tha t'nited states Recla mation Service, who will leava today for Cuba to taka tha posi tion on the commission recently organised by the Cuban govern ment to formulate plans for an Irrigation system In tha province of I'inar del Rio. haa been In tha service of tha United States Government for tha psst six yeara. Since 10 he haa held the position of Consulting Engi neer for the Pacific Coast In the Reclamation Service. He la a native of Holland and has been In charge of irrigation projects In various parte of the United States slnco coming to this coun try In 1S84. Mr. Henny waa ap pointed to the position under tha Cuban government by the Cuban Secretary of Agriculture on tha recommendation of tba Cuban Minister at Washington. He will be in Cuba about four months. His commission will necessitate frequent trips to that country. Ha will, however, retain his po sition with the Reclamation Service In Portland. -- weather benefiting tha corn and wheat crop. At North Taklraa the mercury reached 10 at i o'clock, breaking- rec ords for July. Thunder storms ara reported at Val ley. In Stevens County, with a record of 104 yesterday and today. Lewis ton records were shattered with 106 to day, tha hottest since July 31. 190S. At Kltopls, In Central Washington, near Pasco, the thermometer registered 110 In tha shade, the hottest for three yeara. At Watervllle, seat of Douglas County, tha mercury yesterday rose to 9 S. and tha hot weather haa not yet affected crops there. Cool nlghta prevail throughout tha district tributary to Spokane. Thous ands of people left town for Summer resorts and watering- places this morn ing. Sliower Relieves' Raker. RAKER. Or.. July IT. Speclal. The thermometer at the local Weather Bu reau office hit tha high mark today at M degree. A shower shortly after noon stayed the rise of tha mercury. On the slreeta the temperature ranged from 10C to 1'. There was not much discomfort even at thst temperature, however, ow ing to tha altitude. DOG ON GUARD MONTHS f.TAUVIX AXIM.U, WATCHES OVF.lt MASTER'S BOHV. Sean-hlne; Iarty Finds Pead Trap per and Faithful Canine Com panion in Mountain Cabin. REND. Or- July 17. tfSpeclaLV Guarded by a atarvlng dog which for seven months watched over tba dead body of his master, the remains of John Parker, a trapper, were found Thursday io his but in tha Cascade Mountains 61 miles west of Bend by a searching party. The date of the trappera a earn was established by a note In his diary writ ten November IS. 110. The note reaa: I'm down and out." The dor had eaten every scrap of leather and piece of rubbish about the place, but starvation could not lure the animal from Ita post of duty. i ns searching party found tba dog a mere hulk of skin and bones. Parker went Into the mountains to trap last Fall. His abaence of several months occasioned no apprehension among his friends, but when Summer came and he did not reappear, the searching party started out. The searchers found his camp near Lara Lake. Parker had died in his bunk with all his clothes on. He was 54 years old and came here from Au burn. Wash where be Is said to have had a sister. Eyebrows Singed by Flames. The residence of 8. E. Sorenson. (80 Oantenbeln avenue, was damaged to the extent of 1400 at 10:11 o'clock laat night, when a fire started in a clothea closet. Sorenson's hat was burned and his hair and eyebrows singed In trying to extinguish the flames with a blanket. The fire de partment put out the lira, it is not known how the fire started. Wells to Meet Jack Johnson. LONDON. July 1". Articles have been signed for a contest in London be fore September SO between JacK John son and Bomoaaier ens, xor me championship of the world. Most Eng lishmen consider thst Wells will have small chance against the heavyweight champion. It. ' 1 t . . . : v v - . . t ... - .i- , RISH FIGHT, BILL Opposition to Sick Insurance Plan Develops. TAX NOT WELL ADJUSTED Rural Conditions Make Irish Work era ray More Than English. "Board" Clane Nullifies Good Features of Act. DUBLIX. July 17.-(Speclal.) The reception of the government Insurance bill here has been most surprising. The chorus of cordial agreement which greeted it in the-Commons was almost unprecedented for so great a measure. But since the discussion haa turned from admiration of the moving princi ple to an examination of the details de signed to carry this principle Into practical legislation, a curious unset tling change. In Ireland, at least, has come over the atmosphere. The General Council of the Irish County Councils, aa near to a national, representative body aa Ireland owns, haa actually decided that the bill will "create more hardship and suffering: In Ireland than It could possibly relieve." In view of the high alms and elab orate benefits claimed for Chancellor Lloyd-George's latest measure of so cial reform, this Is, Indeed, an astonish ing statement- By the vast scheme of sickness insurance, to which the worker will contribute a maximum of eight centa per week. 10.wu.ow ware-earners at present unprotected by insurance of any kind, will have their health made a matter of strict state concern. The re maining t.000.000 workers, already ln aured. who come under the provisions of tha act. will have the efficiency of their own friendly societies guaran teed by the government. Irish rroblcnis Rnral. Then what Is there about this far seeing project likely "to creste more hsrdshlps and suffering In Ireland than It could possibly relleveT" Several things. For even here ap pears the old left-handed mental atti tude of British Legislators that what will met the Industrial conditions that constitute the main problems of Eng land. Scotland and Wales, will be equally suitable for. John Bull's otbel Island. But the problems of this coun try are on the whole not Industrial at all. but ruraL Irish economics are rural economics, and he economics which have dictated the insurance bill are the economics of an industrial com munity. Here lies the cardinal naw oi tne win - n A m Ir.lu vA Tha Pur. llsh countryside is not in such urgent . . .i iii. need or social reiorm aa m countryside. Tha statistics of this last CWIIUB ,HU luuh v,viniu.ii . thoroughly rural province of this coun- II J, LJ ivk ! ' population by emigration than all the rest of Ireland put together. So while It may be disputed that It will do inpre harm than gooa in ireisna, . i n t .- htt lnten- DVUI1U IU HBlB v. ...w -- tions of the bill spoiled by England s Procrustean naiem.iiBi For example, Ireland will not get aa much out of this scheme as the other . i n v. Vln.ilnm herause. for LUUUll ir. V . ii . .. r. one thing, there is less sickness here. Like all rural peoples, the Irish peas ants are much healthier and live ap preciably longer than the town-dwelling Britons. Although insurance com panies recognise this difference end maka allowance for It, the present bill quite overlooks It. Irish Weekly Wage Less. But Ireland haa even more serious objectlona to the MIL Before the meaaare was Introduced. It was freely rumored that half the eligible workers of Ireland could come In for centa a week. This was plausible enough, for employes receiving 2.25 a week or less are set down for this amount In the text of the bill, as those getting less than 13 are paying 4 centa and those getting less than 13.75 are paying 6 cents. From here op to SIS a week the flat minimum rate obtains of the 8 cent weekly contribution. The average rural wage in Ireland Is S2-SS as against one of 13.76 in Great Britain. But one clause In the bill nul lifies the whole discrimination which this sliding scale would make for Irishmen. The receipt of board and lodging or of board alone, raises the contribution arbitrarily to the maxi mum of cents a week. All through Ireland the practice obtalna of paying rural laborers In board aa well as In money. At one stroke then they are taxed three or four times as much aa the British farm laborers, where this custom does not obtain. Another fry In the amber results from this same neglect to adapt the bill to the Irish situation. When the employe pays as little as 2 cents, 12 cents must come out of the employer. This will hit ptVtty hard the farmer whose sons help him run the farm for a nominal wage. And If they are more than II when the compulsory acheme begins, and leas than 21. they must pay the maximum of t cents themselves. Industries Not Helped. , The cardinal mistake, however, is to exact the same toU from workers in t i a w... mAiAV la worth more and goea farther, as from those In Eng land, vno earn an everm twice as much In wagea. Thla lack of discrimination, besides - Its Injury to the farmers, will not help struggling Industries either, by which Ireland is trying to recover some of her long lost commercial prosperity. There is a serious movement on root as the result of alt this criticism, to set aside the government grant of 8 centa a head for tne workers of Ire land and croas her off the bill for the present altogether. This money would then be used perhaps by an Irish Parliament to set up a scheme of state Insurance designed for Ire land and for Ireland alone. The un employed provisions could wait, too, as the three trades affected, mining, building and ahipbullalng. are here in need of no present assistance. Irishmen do not underestimate the good intentions of the bill, nor do they deny that It is built on the sound social foundation that state control Is fat proving itself to be. But the bill, as it stands, is a British, and not an Irish, measure. If it can go through a metamorphosis of adaptation, well and good the Irish party are already stir ring themselves to that end. But if not. better go through the pains of bearing an entirely new bill than risk the possibility that this one will cre ate "more hardship and eufferlng In Ireland than It can possibly relieve." PIONEER WOMAN PASSES Mrs. Sarah Jane Rntledijre, Who Came West in '52, Dies. Mrs. Sarah Jane Rutledge, pioneer of the early days in Waahington and Ore gon and prominent in social and- busl- n, flrtlea for E0 vaars. died at her home. 240 King street, at the age of 87 years, Sunday. Old age was the cause of death. Mrs. Rutledge was one of the best known figures In the two states In the early days. She came with her three children across the plains in 1852, go ing to Washington Territory and set tling on the present site of Olympla. This property she later lost through litigation. Another child. Mrs. 8. W. King, of Portland, waa born in a block house -when Indians were besieging it. Born in West Virginia, Mrs. Rutledge was the daughter of Major William Scott and the niece of General Wlnfield Scott. She was married at the age of 19 years to William Rutledge. a direct descendant of Edward Rutledge. a signer of the Declaration of Independ ence, in Bellefontalne, Ohio. Until the time of her death Mrs. Rut ledge retained a youthful and optimis tic view of life and kept her faculties to the last. She leaves three daugh ters, Mrs. 8. -W. King, of Portland, and Mrs. Newton Huddleston and Mrs. O. Jennlng, of Lebanon. The 11-months-old son of Andrew Jennlng, of Lebanon, Is a great-great-grandson. The body of Mrs. Rutledge will be cremated Tuesday and the ashes burled beside those of her husband In Leban on. BURGLAR LOSES RACE MAN CATCHES PROWLER AFTER CHASE OF SEVERAL BLOCKS. (julmby Street Resident Returns to Find Intruder, Who Flees, Dis gorging Loot as He Runs. Scraping acquaintance with officers of religious organizations and obtaining thete street addresses for the purpose of burglary. Is believed by the police to be the game of William Frailer, captured by A. B. Whiteside after a sensational foot race of half a dosen blocks when Whltesldes returned to his home. SS0 Qulmby street. Sunday night, and chased Ftazier out through the rear door. Whltesldes plays ball with his sons and boys of the neighborhood and was In much better condition for foot racing than Fraxler. so when they came to a plot of plowed ground, the chase soon became a one-sided affair. Fraxler dis gorged a pocket full of Jewelry taken from the house which he had ransacked. He had entered by prying open a rear window with a chisel. Beds were torn apart, bureau drawers emptied on the floor and all the rooms turned topsy turvy by Fraxler In his search for loot. Mrs. Whltesldes is secietary of the Oregon Holiness Association, which is now holding a camp meeting, hear Tre mont street. Whltesldes took ice to the camp last evening but did not stay for the services Had he done so he would have missed the burglar. Just as White sides Inserted a key in the front door he heard a noise Inside. He threw off his coat and ran to the rear of the house. Ftazier had Jumped oil of the back door and was going over the fence and the hurdle race was on. Fraxler said he came to Portland yes terday morning from Oakland. He had the name of Le Grand M. Baldwin, pres ident of the Oregon Holiness Associa tion, and that of Mrs. Whltesldes, secre tary, in a memorandum book, and the names and addresses of many persons in other cities, believed to be identified with religious organizations. Frazier told Csptain Bailey at the po lice station that he bought the chisel found In his pocket to pry windows open. He declared he was alone In the White sides house, that he returned to White sides all the stolen property, and then became silent. "I refuse to say anything more," said he. "because what I say will make it all the worse for me. I told you I was In the bouse, was caught and that is all there is to it." Neighbors of Whltesldes say there was another man outside the house while Fraxier was ransacking it. M'GRElYIOPEFOL ROADSTERS MORE FOPCTjAR IN PORTLAND, HE SAYS. Magnate Says He Will Do His Best to Keep This City in Northwest ern League in 1912. SPOKANE Wash, July 17. (Special.) "I believe the Portland public generally Is more friendly to the Northwestern League now than It has ever been before. I believe they want to see Northwestern League games on alternate dates with our Coast League teams. I believe they can and will support continuous ball. "You may quote me Just as strong aa you like aa saying that I will do all 1 my power to keep the Northwesters League in Portland In' 1912. I am greatly Interested in the Northwestern League. It Is a dandy, compact circuit. It plays fine hall. It will draw better crowds in 1912 than it Is drawing this year." ' Judge W. W. McCredie, president of the Portland Paciflo Coast and North western League clubs, made the above statement this afternoon. "1 don't like to have people ask me for my comparison of the - relative strength of the two leagues! I'm boost ing both and I won't knock either one. Let's forget all about each other and tend to our 'knlttln' 'play ball the best we know how. Next year Portland must have a better schedule." Limiting Choice of a Pope. Guglielmo Ferrero, In the Atlantic For centuries, accorlng to the ancient custom, the Pope has been selected from among the College of Cardinals that Is (since It Is seldom that the col lege Is complete) from among 60-odd persons. In actual practice, however, the choice Is far more restricted; for anothep custom, grafted upon the earlier practice, makea it an unwritten law that the Pope be chosen from among the Italian cardinals that is, from a group of not more than 40 per sons. But. again, this range of choice is still further reduced: for, from great age, from an uncertain condition of health and from notorious mediocrity, a certain number of cardinals are sure to be withdrawn from consideration before each election. The veto of the Catholic powers, an absurd Institution which everybody supposed had long since fallen into desuetude, but which, at the last conclave, was unexpectedly revived by Austria, adds still another limitation. The net result of thiJ whole process Is that the Pope Is se lected from amongst 10 or 12 Italian cardinals. . Physiology of Sleep. Fred W. Eastman In the Atlantic Sleep is no longer Indefinitely con sidered a wandering abroad of the soul, but Is now known to be a tem porary poisoning of the brain-cells by the waste products resulting during the day from the activity of the body-cells. ln generaL Thus when a muscle-cell or a nerve-cell acts, nutritive material stored within its walls is broken down into substances that are of no value and merely impede further action of the cell unless removed. Normally these waste products are washed out by the blood stream which at the-same M SMOKE ffj jM time provides new coll food, and is finally Itself purified by the excretory organs the lungs and the kidneys. In the course of the day, however, produc tion is In excess of removal and then the clogging effect of these substances is manifested by fatigue In muscles and brain, the extreme deeree of which results, in the latter organ, in the lna- bllity to act, which we Know as Bleep. The third of our time thus spent out of commission is therefore really due to the inadequacy of the excretory or gans for purifying the blood. , - ' A New Drunkard's Isle. Kansas City Star. Drunkard's Island Is the name by which the Salvation Army's latest col ony for Inebriates, off the coast oi New Zealand, Is known .to passing mariners. . Its real name Is Pakatoa. All spirits and alcohol in any form are forbidden on Pakatoa, and the colon ists lead the simple life on a fruit diet, without drugs and policemen. The New Zealand government recently passed an act giving magistrates power to commit persons who have been four times convicted of drunkennes3 to Pa- Absolute Security Accurate Information That's what an abstract should stand for. and it's what our ab stracts do stand for. The best equipment in Oregon A half million investment behind every one we issue. REMEMBER That no opinion, certificate or any information can be given without an abstract. You might as well get the abstract with the oplnloa as - to pay for the opinion and let the other fellow keep the abstract. It's more satisfactory cheaper the safest way there is. Lawyers Abstract & Trust Company Room 6 Board of Trade BIdg. Hot, sultry days should find your family at Gear hart Park BY-THE-SEA "We build cottages and bungalows ready for this season on short notice. Talk with our building department. Main office, Gearhart Park, Fourth and Stark streets, Port land, Or. Main 1293 and A 7268. When nothing else will start dirt You KNOW SAPOLIO WILL DO IT Works Without Waste CLEANS-SCOURS-POLISHES katoa. The residents work at market gardening, fruit culture, framemaking and the manufacture of children's toys. To Puget Sound and " British Columbia Kalama, Kelso. Chehalls. Centralis. Tacoroa, Seattle, Everett. Belllngham. New Westminster and Vancouver, B.C. s 3 TRAINS DAILY 3 International Limited ited A The daylight train, io TH"E OWL For busy business men. A ; s tr. JU. SHOES LINE EXPRESS! The night train, 10.S0 P. M.I All trains from North Banlc . Station.. 11th and Hoyt Sta. Tickets, Sleeping and Par- lor-Car Reservations at City Ticket Office, 123 Third Street, and at Depot. H. DICKSON. C. P. T. ARCHIBALD GRAY, A. O. F. & P. A. Through Fast Service VIA THE Soo-Spokane Portland TRAIN" DE LUXE The finest transcontinental train in service. Electric lighted; standard and tonrist cars, dining-cars, library-compartment-observation cars. Through the Famous Crow's Nest Pass By Daylight. For rates and descriptive matter, apply at 142 Third Street, or address frank; R. JOHNSON, Gen'l. Agent, Portland, Or. COAST S I IMF SFRVICF ar a. 1 1 1 1 - ubii 1 1 M. 1 Ef"" Did You. Elver Notice tkat tke man wlio drinks .. Pabst BlueRibbon Toe Bear of QuaLty- H is never quite sa tisfied witt any otner Leer. It nas a mild, , delicate, m e How flavor found in no otner. Ord today. cr a case A RATA BROS., 89-71 Sixth St. TeL Main 480. Home A 2531 FOR YOUR HAIR Here Are Facts We Want You to Prove at Our Risk Marvelous as it may seem, Rexall "93" Hair Tonic has grown hair on heads that were once hald. Of course it Is understood tliat in none of these cases were the hair roots dead nor had the scalp taken on a glazed, shiny appearance. 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