COFFEE BREAK Saturday, February 23, 2019 East Oregonian C5 OUT OF THE VAULT Milton youth foils his own kidnapping scheme By RENEE STRUTHERS East Oregonian A 20-year-old Milton man who attempted to extort money from his wealthy uncle in April 1909 foiled his own scheme when he lost his nerve and confessed that a kidnapping plot with himself as the victim was a complete hoax. Sam A. Miller, president of the Mil- ton nursery company and former mayor of Milton, received an unsigned letter declaring a mysterious “we” had kid- napped his nephew, Leonard A. Raup, and were holding him for $1,200 ran- som. Miller was directed to take the ransom to a railroad track east of Milton at 11 p.m. on April 5, 1909, to a point where he would find a dim light. He was to deposit the money there and turn out the light, then return home to wait for his nephew’s release before reporting the incident to police. Failure to com- ply with the instructions would result in the burning death of Raup and also the death of Miller’s young daughter. Miller immediately dispatched a copy of the letter to Umatilla County Sheriff Til Taylor, then withdrew the ransom money from his bank with every intention of complying with the kidnappers’ demands. Sheriff Tay- lor and Deputy Bert Wilson drove to the scene of the ransom drop to inves- tigate. They returned to Miller’s house just before the kidnap victim appeared at 8:15 p.m. Raup declared he left his boarding house April 3 and was on his way to town to buy tobacco when he was kid- napped by two Freewater men, who took him to a straw stack. He escaped, he said, while his kidnappers were drinking and playing cards. But Raup’s guilty conscience got the better of him. He came up with the kidnapping scheme himself, wrote the ransom letter and hid for two days in a deserted house on his grandfather’s property. But a dust and wind storm the day of the ransom drop-off was too much for Raup’s nerves, he confessed to a representative of the East Oregonian during an interview. Raup said he had found himself in a bit of a financial difficulty, and came up with a scheme to get money from his uncle to square his accounts. He had planned to skip town if the ransom scheme failed. He denied any intention to hurt his cousin, and said he intended to make a full confession to his uncle the night of the ransom drop-off but manufactured his escape story when he found law enforcement was already involved. Raup was arrested by Sheriff Taylor and brought to the jail in Pendleton to await action of the grand jury. He pled guilty to attempting to extort money from his uncle on April 15. DAYS GONE BY 100 Years Ago From the East Oregonian Feb. 23-24, 1919 There is a report in circulation here today that Harry Samuels, the 19-year-old boy who has been in the custody of Sheriff T.D. Taylor since Saturday, has confessed that he killed Omar Olinger, the store keeper near the tanks south of Milton, who was found murdered last Friday. The evidence is known to be very strong against the boy. Sheriff Taylor and Deputy Blakely went to Milton this morning to investi- gate a few things that remain to be cleared up in connection with the case. According to reports in circulation and which appear well founded though not officially confirmed, Samu- els claims that he killed Olinger during a quarrel. 50 Years Ago From the East Oregonian Feb. 23-24, 1969 “I’ll go if you will go with me,” said Karen Bounds to her mother-in-law, Doris Bounds, and that was all it took for the two Hermiston women to arrive in Hong Kong, China, five days later, Doris told the Business and Professional Women at their meeting last week. A call to the travel bureau, inocu- lations, and the two were off on a 22-hour plane trip to Hono- lulu, to Tokyo where they were greeted by the “Vienna Waltz” on the intercom, and on to Hong Kong. It was the middle of the night, a day ahead of Oregon and seven hours time differ- ence when they arrived. Captain Roger Bounds, U.S. Army pilot, husband of Karen and son of Doris Bounds, arrived on rest and recreation leave in Hong Kong two days later. 25 Years Ago From the East Oregonian Feb. 23-24, 1994 A Umatilla County grand jury indicted Damon Petrie on nine counts in connection with his escape attempt last week in which a Stanfield police officer was seriously injured. Fol- lowing the arraignment a date will be set for Petrie to enter a plea on the charges of attempted aggravated murder, first-de- gree assault, escape, first-degree burglary, two counts of first-degree theft and felon in possession of a firearm. Petrie, from the Bend area, has a long criminal record and was on parole when he was arrested in Stanfield. Residents of Stan- field seem more interested in the recovery of Petrie’s vic- tim, Butch Parrish. Yellow ribbons have been placed all over town to show support for the injured officer and his family. THIS DAY IN HISTORY On Feb. 23, 1954, the first mass inoculation of schoolchildren against polio using the Salk vaccine began in Pittsburgh as some 5,000 students were vaccinated. In 1685, composer George Frid- eric Handel was born in present-day Germany. In 1836, the siege of the Alamo began in San Antonio, Texas. In 1848, the sixth president of the United States, John Quincy Adams, died in Washington, D.C., at age 80. In 1870, Mississippi was readmit- ted to the Union. In 1942, the first shelling of the U.S. mainland during World War II occurred as a Japanese submarine fired on an oil refinery near Santa Barbara, California, causing little damage. In 1945, during World War II, U.S. Marines on Iwo Jima captured Mount Suribachi, where they raised two American flags (the second flag-rais- ing was captured in the iconic Associ- ated Press photograph.) Thought for Today: “The essential conditions of everything you do must be choice, love, passion.” — Nadia Bou- langer, French composer (1887-1979). Universal Crossword Edited by David Steinberg February 23, 2019 ACROSS 1 ___ mignon 6 Wild way to run 10 Android programs 14 Formally change 15 Actress Polo or Garr 16 Champagne stopper 17 Stops smoking abruptly 20 Cross swords 21 Choose 22 Pollen-averse dwarf 23 Feel ill 25 ___ of Congress 26 Of a certain age 35 Annoy 36 Contemptuous smile 37 Mario’s sidekick 38 Colorado ski area 40 Enero is its first month 41 Rim 42 DeGeneres who voiced Dory 44 47 48 51 52 53 57 59 63 66 67 68 69 70 71 Puccini classic Dwarf with glasses Completely relaxed Bill of Rights count “Solo” director Howard Appends Wolf’s home Yale grads Third part of an identifying expression Abdul-Jabbar’s sch. Roof overhang Prehistoric diet Working hard Facial sites Perry of Medea fame DOWN 1 Help page lists, briefly 2 “My turn” 3 R2-D2’s princess 4 Catch slyly 5 Highest-scoring NFL plays 6 Sitting on 7 Liquefy 8 Chicago airport code 9 Tacky art 10 National Park measure 11 Trendy fish salad 12 Commander in chief, informally 13 Blue-bottled vodka 18 Quarterback Kaepernick 19 “___ we meet again” 24 Tax org. 25 First word in a clue list 26 Skin care giant 27 Unwritten tests 28 Aptitude 29 Tidy up 30 Salami type 31 Word before “card” or “stick” “TAIL FEATHERS” By Trent H. Evans sudoku answers 32 33 34 39 43 45 46 49 50 53 54 55 56 57 58 60 61 62 64 65 Youngster, informally Some frozen waffles Nephew’s sibling Summer zodiac sign Unacceptable ___ asada A long time ___ Sight and smell “Sometime ...” Greenish-blue Tear channel Surrealist with a surreal mustache “Go fly a kite!” Opera star Just manages, with “out” Conversational pause Frozen drink brand Hershey’s toffee bar Small dog’s perch Like the name “Bill” for a creditor