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About The Hermiston herald. (Hermiston, Or.) 19??-1984 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 3, 1917)
THE HERMISTON HERALD, SLAIN AND BURNED HI GILL IS INDICTED CHILDREN | Marine News Father Arrested When Evidence Indi Shipbuilding FOR LIQUOR BRIBE cates Murder of Offsprings. Pacific Coast Yards All Busy, is Report Tacoma, Wash.—Four small children were brutally murdered at Auburn Sunday as they lay in their beds. The room and beds had been saturated with kerosene and then the house set on fire. Their father, S. A. Hewett, a North ern Pacific brakeman in the railroad yards at Auburn, was placed under ar rest by the King county sheriff and taken to Seattle following the gather ing of a corwd of nealry 1000 persons, among whom there was considerable Executive is Said to Have Been Paid talk of lynching. Hewett*’s story is that the four $4000 to Protect Importers—13 children retired as uusal to their beds Saturday night, but during the night Indicted by Grand Jury. one was taken ill. He went to attend the little one, taking a kerosene lamp, which he left burning on a chair be Seattle, Wash.—The long-expected tween their two beds. Being restless, he said he took a walk, returned later indictments against Mayor Hiram C. Gill, Chief of Police Charles L. Beck- ingham and ex-Sherif Robert T. Counsel for “Leak” inquiry. Hodge, charging conspiracy to violate the interstate commerce and Federal liquor laws, and acceptance of bribes, t -4 were returned by the United States re grand jury Saturday and warrants were placed in the hands of Deputy Marshals for the arrest of these de fendants and 10 others who were in dicted. The others indicted were four city detectives, an ex-policeman, Edward P. Baker, manager of the Jesse Moore Hunt company, of San Francisco; Lo gan and Fred Billingsley and two associates of the Billingsleys. The principal witnesses against the Mayor, chief of police and ex-sheriff were Logan and Fred Billingsley, who were indicted several weeks ago for conspiracy to violate the interstate commerce laws and pleaded guilty, but were not sentenced that they might be Sherman L. Whipple, just chosen counsel for the committee of the house used as government witnesses. As soon as they learned of the in of representatives in the “leak” in dictments, Gill, Beckingham and De vestigation, is a leading New England tectives Peyser, Doom and McLennan lawyer who has had many important went to the Federal building and gave cases. He is distinctly a trial lawyer. $3600 bail each. Ex-Sheriff Hodge Mr. Whipple was born in 1862. He was said to be arranging a bond. The is a graduate of Yale. Billingsleys and W. H. Pielow and William Frazier, transfer men, are al and fell into a sound sleep, from which ready under bond for earlier indict he was awakened by flames crackling ments and new security was not re all about him. Unable to reach the quired of them. children, he said he rushed to a neigh C. J. Mullen, ex-Policeman, was in bor’s to give a fire alarm and then re dicted charged with attempting to in turned, and with a garden hose tried timidate the Billingsleys, government to quench the flames. witnesses, in an effort to induce them Examination of the children’s char to jump their bond and flee to Canada. red bodies, the coroner said, revealed Mayor Gill said that he would not the fact that their skulls had been even temporary detach himself from crushed in, while the mattresses on his office because of the indictment, which they lay were saturated with and that he would be a candidate for blood. re-election in 1918. If convicted of a Behind a little trundle bed on which felony the mayor would be removed slept the only girl of four, Myrtle, automatically. aged 6, was found a blood-stained All of the defendants, 13 in number, hammer, and in the room an empty are charged jointly with conspiracy in bottle labeled chloroform. one indictment, with the exception of Under the bed in which the three Mullen, who is accused singly. boys lay was found a blood-stained pil Mayor Gill is accused by the govern low slip. ment with having accepted a bribe of The other three children, Ephraim, $4000 last summer from Logan Bil aged 10; Arthur, aged 8, and Clar lingsley at the time the alleged con ence, aged 5, were found in one big spiracy began. bed. Mayor Gill, Chief of Police Beck After the fire the father handed to ingham and Hodge, together with the a neighbor, Frank McGilvray, an en four city detectives, who are former velope containing the insurance poli members of the waterfront division of cies which it is said he had taken out the police dry squad, are charged with recently for his children and which plotting with the Billingsleys to ship had been saved from the fire. huge quantities of whisky into Seattle under organized official and police pro Oregon Troops Ordered Home. tection. Portland—“All Oregon troops on the border ordered home.” Hunt Loses Governorship This telegram received Sunday after- from Senator George E. Cham On Supreme Court's Ruling noon berlain, by Major W. W. Wilson, ac Phoenix, Ariz. — The Arizona Su ting adjutant general, is the first an preme court Saturday returned a de nouncement that has been made of the decision of the government to recall cision holding that Thomas E. Camp from the Mexican border the last of bell, Republican, is the de facto gov the Oregon contingent which was ernor of Arizona. called out seven months ago, and The decision was signed by Justices which has been in continual service Franklin and Ross. Justice Cunning ever since. ham submitted a dissenting opinion. High Roumanians Die in Wreck. The majority holds that the certifi cate of election issued to Campbell is Berlin—More than 100 Roumanians prima facie evidence of his election. of high rank lost their lives in a train The court issued no writ, stating its wreck near the Roumanian station of belief that George W. Hunt would now Tshura, according to a dispatch said by surrender the office, but declaring that the Overseas News agency to have if he did not a writ would be issued. been printed in the Russki Slovo. The In a brief statement Mr. Hunt said locomotive of a train carrying the Rou he would not appear at the state house manians to Russia jumped the track on Monday and that the office and its and the cars took fire. belongings would be surrendered to It is reported from the same source Governor Campbell. that 45,000 Roumanian refugees have already settled in the Russian province Sailors Drift Ten Days. of Poltava and that a large number of Willemstad, Curacao—Three French others continue to arrive. sailors have reached the island of Radio Covers Wide Span, Buen Ayre, off the Venezuelan coast, after having been at sea for 10 days in San Diego, Cal. — The new naval a small boat. They were in a starv raido station at Chollas Heights, which ing condition, and brought with them was recently opened gave a demonstra the body of one man who had died. tion of its power Monday when the The sailors reported they were mem operators on duty talked with Arling bers of the crew of the French armor ton, Va., station, Darien, Panama, ed cruiser Jeanne d’Arc, stationed at Nome, Alaska, and Honolulu, and over- Martinique, and were carried off in heard French operators at work on the their boat by the current. island of Papeete, in the South Pacific. The men were transported to Cura They concluded by exchanging the time cao. of day with operators at a radio sta tion near Melbourne, Australia. Haytien Ex-President Dies. Villa Is Militant. New York—News of the death of General Davilmar Theodore, once presi Washington, D. C.—No official in dent of Haiti, was contained in private formation is at hand as to whether letters from Haiti, received here Mon Villa or Carranza troops are to occupy day. It was said that his death oc the terriotry left vacant by the Ameri- | curred in Port au Prince January 13. cans, but the belief is strong here that | General Theodore overthrew the gov Villa, who is credited with having a ernment of General Oreste Zanor in, force of at least 8000 well-armed men 1914, and was in turn forced to abdi and who is now said to be at least four cate the presidency in November, 1915. times as strong as when the American He fled from Haiti, but returned after troops crossed the border, will make a American interventon. desperate effort to take the territory. Seattle Mayor and Police Chief Caught in Federal Net. DRY SQUAD IS ALSO ACCUSED RM The Pacific Coast is getting its share in steel shipbuilding contracts, accord ing to the report of the bureau of navi gation of the department of Commerce, which covers ali contracts in American shipyards up tc January 1, 1917. The report has just been issued from Washington. D. C. It shows up to that date contracta on 403 ships reported, representing a gross tonnage of 1,495,601, the largest in the history of the United States. During December American yards fin ished nine steel ships and made new contracts for 24 ships of 105,120 gross tons. On the basis of the report from the bureau of navigation, the shipyards of the Pacific Coast have contracts on 21 per cent of the ships under construc tion, and these contracts represent 36 per cent of the gross tonnage. The distribution of the contracts re ported by January 1 to the bureau is as follows on the Pacific Coast: Port land, 14 ships of 67,400 gross tons; Seattle, 28 ships of 161,920 gross tons; Oakland, six ships of 30,600 gross tons; and San Francisco, 28 ships of 175,028 gross tons. This is a total of 86 ships of 434,948 gross tons under contract in Pacific Coast yards. Open Rail Bids for Railway. Seattle—At the office here Thursday of the Alaska Engineering commis sion bids were opened for 1300 tons of steel rails for the Nenana-Fairbanks division of the government railroad in Alaska and also for a 40-ton switch ing locomotive. The estimated cost of the rails and locomotive is $55,000. Bids were submitted by numerous companies in various parts of the coun try. The awards will be announced here in a few days. C. E. Dole, purchasing agent of the commission, announced that a branch office of the commission will be opened at Portland, Or., with Joseph J. Hit- tinger in charge. Allard Takes to Water. Sparkling California champagne foamed and splashed into the Columbia river Tuesday as it trickled from the bow of the new five-masted auxiliary schooner S. I. Allard, launched at St. Helens, Miss Jessie Allard, of Eureka, Cal., breaking the bottle as she christ ened the stately vessel in honor of her father, a banker of the California city. The Allard’s initial dip was carried out as programmed, there being not the slightest hesitancy on the part of the vessel when the last block was knocked out of place. Brings News ot Shipyard. Aberdeen—W. J. Patterson, banker, who returned from the East this week, gives a positive assurance to business that another shipyard is to be started here, with ample capital, and that a $1,000,000 high-grade paper mill, backed by Eastern capital is also as sured. The citizens must raise $2400 for the shipyard to prepare the site and the city must give water rights for the paper mill. Patterson says the East has plenty of money that is coming West. NORTHWEST MARMET REPORT Portland—Wheat—Bluestem, $1.52 per bushel; fortyfold, $1.50; club, $150; red Russian, $1.49. Millfeed—Spot prices: Bran, $26.50 per ton; shorts, $30.50; rolled barley, $42043. Hay—Producers’ prices: Timothy, Eastern Oregon, $19@20 per ton; val ley, $15016; alfalfa, $15016; valley grain hay, $12@13; clover, $11, Butter — Cubes, extras, 39c per pound; prime firsts, 38c; firsts, 37c; dairy, 30c. Jobbing prices: Prints, extras, 40@42c; cartons. 1c extra; butterfat, No. 1, 41c; No. 2, 39c, Portland. Eggs — Oregon ranch, current re ceipts, 35@36c per dozen; candled, 27 @28c; selects, 40c. Poultry — Hens, heavy, 17@18c per pound; light, 16@17c; springs, 16@ 18c; turkeys, live, 18@20c; dressed. 221@26c; ducks, 18@20c; geese, 12 @13c. Veal—Fancy, 14@143c per pound. Pork—Fancy, 13@133c per pound. Vegetables—Artichokes, $1.15^1.25 per dozen; tomatoes, $6.00(6.50 per crate; cabbage, $4@5 per hundred; eggplant, 25c per pound; lettuce, $2.50 @3.50 per box; cucumbers, $1.50@ 2.00 per dozen; celery, $5.50 per crate; cauliflower, $2.5002.75; peppers, 2 5 ©30c per pound; sack vegetables, $1.25 per sack; sprouts, 12}c per pound; rhubarb, 9@1lac. Potatoes — Oregon buying prices, $2.25@2.50 per hundred; sweets, $4. Onions — Oregon buying prices, $6 per sack, country points. Green Fruits—Apples, 75c@$1.50 per box; pears, $1.75@2.50; cranber ries, $10011 per barrel. Hops—1916 crop, 5@9c per pound; 1917 contracts, 10011c. Wool—Eastern Oregon, fine, 28@33c ; per pound; coarse, 33036c; valley, 33 @4lc; mohair, nominal. Cattle—Steers, prime, $8.5009.00; fair to good, $7.5008.40; medium, $7.00 @7.50; cows, choice, $7.50@ 7 75; medium to good, $6.7507.25; or dinary to fair, $6.0006.50; heifers, $5.50 @8.00; bulls, $3.75 @ 6.25; calves, $3.000 9.00. Hogs — Light and heavy packing, | $11.150 11.35; rough heavy, $10.000 | 10.85; pigs and skips, $9.75010.50; stock hogs, $8.500 9.50. Sheep—Yearling wethers, $9.000 | 10.50; lambs, »10.75@12.25; old weth- I era, $8.75@9.75; ewes, $6.75@8.75. | HERMISTON, OREGON. TO PRODUCE BABY BEEF Labor the Greatest Blessing in Life First Essential of Ticklish Busi ness Is Quality. By REV. JENKIN LLOYD JONES Work is not the consequence of sin, but the triumph of man. Labor instead of being a curse is the profoundest blessing in life. Human labor then is no commodity, a thing to be bought and sold like cotton or corn. Back of the hand is the directing brain, behind the sweat are human longings, the love of human hearts, and the thirst of human minds. Capital, the exploiter of labor, is but the labor of yester day It is canned industry. The unholiest combination the world has ever known is the selfish combination of the toil of yesterday, dehumanized under the name of capital, against the throbbing, thrilling toil of today, the uncanned wealth held in solution in the sweat of today. Peace between labor and capital will come only in a larger combine, a higher fraternity, that will recognize the common interests between the section man with his pick and the president with his pencil and his “Ready Reckoner” of percentages. POULTRY POINTERS The practice of poultry feeding, while governed largely by circum stances, should as far as possible be confined to the regular routine. A hen eats approximately three to four ounces a day, or about six pounds a month. The amount fed each duy varies with the appetite of the bird. The success of egg production de- pends largely upon the activity of the bird. The reason the Leghorns excel in egg production is largely because they keep themselves in good physical condition. They exercise. It has been found that a few thor ough applications of crude petroleum to the interior of poultry houses will destroy completely the common red mite infesting chickens. The hen that is first off the roost in the morning, keeps busy during the day and is the last to go to roost at night is the profitable hen. It will pay the poultry keeper to nail up cracks in the back, sides and root of his henhouse. Some birds have the disposition to take exercise, others have to be forced. This is especially true of the heavier breeds. Overfeeding causes inactivity, which will be manifested by no holes being dug in the straw. The skill of the poultry feeder is tested by the manner in which he com pels the hens to exercise. Egg production is quite largely de pendent upon keeping the birds in con dition It is not the large turkeys that are so desirable, but the medium-size ones that are pretty and smooth. There is no danger of overfeeding, providing the birds are compelled to take sufficient exercise. The hen that is inactive and shows long toenails is seldom a good pro ducer. Divorce Seen as Sequel to “Chocolate Eclair Marriage” One of Kansas City’s divorce proc tors—a woman—has found the true cause of the divorce evil. She is Miss Tiera Farrow, and has had her job for only a few weeks, but she undoubt edly has made a beginning! Perhaps she will find a remedy in the same jig time, remarks the St. Louis Post-Dis patch. It is not the corner saloon, the moth er-in-law or the eternal triangle, says Miss Farrow. Boiled down to its es sentials, her theory seems to be that there are too many chocolate eclair marriages between persons of corn beef and cabbage predilections. In other words, the whole trouble Is that the sentimental novel ideal of marriage as a rose garden Is soon dissipated for the young woman who finds that her husband Is not a wavy-haired hero, but only a matter-of-fact plumber or busi ness man, as the case may be. Thus, somewhere along In the honey moon the poor young thing begins to fear she Is neglected the first time friend husband takes his newspaper and cigar and forgets to blow her a kiss for a whole hour at a stretch. Aft- er a while there are tearful reproaches Just at the moment he is at the most absorbing part of the batting averages, whereupon he wrathfully seizes his hat and goes out to seek a sociable barten der who will defend the Ty Cobb side of a debate all night, if need be. Be fore very long the bride is weeping her tragical tale Into the ear of some sym pathetic friend, while the bridegroom is afraid to go home because he Is In fee simple possession of what Is some- times flippantly referred to as a "bun.” Then It's her for the divorce court and "limony. A Little Bit of Everything One out of four Australians has a substantial bank account. Many ostriches in South Africa are hatched In incubators. A six-mile bore under James Peak, In the Rockies will cut 73 miles off the transcontinental trip. Among the tallest trees In the world Is the Australian eucalyptus, which at tains a height of nearly 500 feet. Ireland has 84,869 laud holders hav ing plats not exceeding an acre, 01,730 who hold more than one acre and not more than five acres, 153,299 under 15 and 136,058 not exceeding 30. Art of Papermaking Given To the World by Captive Chinese in Eighth Century In a communication to the National Geographic society, issued by the so ciety as a bulletin, John Oliver Lea Goree says : “How much we deplore the strin- gency in raw material for the paper market brought about by the European war, It should not be forgotten that to the beneficent results of a battle fought nearly twelve centuries ago can be traced the introduction of the art of papermaking to the western world. Ollina is credited with having nurtured the genius who first conceived the idea of a writing material made from fibrous pulp, and some investigators profess to have found evidence that paper existed in the celestial kingdom at least two centuries before tile Chris- tian era. Whether these claims of cen turies of priority will endure the light of further research, or whether they will be discredited just as have been the same nation’s claim to the inven tion of the mariner’s compass and gun powder. the fact is fairly well estab- lished that when the Arabs defeated a raiding party of celestials before the gates of Samarkand, in the middle of the eighth century, they captured a party of Chinamen who were skilled paper makers. It was from this city of Russian Türkistan, once the capital of that most ruthless of Mongol princes, Tamerlane, that the art of these cap tives spread throughout Asia Minor and northern Africa, into Moorish Spain and finally into Italy, where the first extensive factories were estab- lished in 1276 at Fabriano, still r cen ter of the paper industry in southern Europe. “Up to the closing years of the eight- eenth century till paper was made by hand, sheet by sheet, but in the same year that Napoleon fought the battle of the Pyramids, Louis Robert, n humille workman in the paper mill of Didot, ut Essones, south of Paris, in vented a machine for making paper in an endless web. The Invention was de veloped in England by the two Four driniers, who lost a fortune in their pioneer work. Their names, however, are perpetuated in the papermaking machines of the present day. "The first American paper mill was established by William Rittenhouse in Roxborough, near Philadelphia, just 83 years after the first permanent Eng lish settlement In the United States al Jamestown.” Wise and Otherwise Only Successful When Stock, Farm and Man Behind Both Are Adapt ed to Risky Undertaking— Feed Is Important. The production of baby beef is a very ticklish business. It is success fully done only when stock, farm and the man behind both are all adapted to a very risky undertaking. The whole object is to turn twelve to six teen month-old calves off as prime fat steers, weighing 1.000 to 1,400 pounds in much less time than re- quired for general steer raising. The whole thing means quality animals to start with. It means offspring from strictly beef strains, like Shorthorn, Hereford, Angus or Galloway. Really no other breed need apply In the pro duction of real baby beef, says a writer in Baltimore American. Both mothers and offspring must be abun dantly fed so as to keep these young things steadily on the gain, eating to their full capacity, from birth to mar ket. The calves must nurse their dams and be given an abundance of nu tritious grain from the very start, both while on pasture and when in winter quarters. Concentrated feeds In addition to clover and alfalfa are 3 S . a As "Le gm) eafai ■ .ci Si ,.2 41 ; , Registered Shorthorns. absolutely necessary during the win ter months. Long nursing on the dams or an abundance of milk or skim milk with grain is necessary. This all means that splendid, well- bred stock is to be used only. It means also that you have got to have ideal farm conditions, an abundance of the very best pasture and legume hays, silage and grain feeds. Can Be Done in East. There is no reason why baby beef cannot be made in the East, except that labor is expensive or that farms have not been farmed to produce high est quality legumes and other grasses for pasture. Besides this, the produc tion of grain Is more expensive as a rule in the East, thus contributing to high costs In making beef. You see the regular average pasture, with the regular average method of feeding, will not produce topnotch baby beef. I do not mean to say that wc cannot reach a point whore raising baby beef may not be profitable in the East ; not that, but wo have got to get ready for that sort of farming first. LABOR AND FERTILITY SAVED Excellent Farm Practice to Haul Ma nure Direct to Field Where It Is to Be Utilized. Farmers and scientists are pretty well agreed that under ordinary farm conditions the best place for manure after It leaves the barn Is spread on the field where It Is to bo utilized. More and more farmers are building their barns now with a view to driving titrough the barn, loading the manure directly on to tlie wagon or spreader, and taking It out to the field each day. This Is excellent farm practice. It saves labor and soil fertility. Rest spoils many a man who was willing to work. A skeptic Is a man who doubts some of bis own stories. Lambs oft rush Into Wall street where old sheep fear to tread. Fortunately there is seldom tiny need of brains in a love affair. Oh, Liberty, what a lot of divorces are applied for in thy name! Never kick a dog to which you have not been properly introduced. A dog’s bark may be worse than his bite, but give us the bark, please. Just the same. It’s a fortunate thing for some men Study the capability of your soil. that their ancestors left them an hon * • • ored name. Keep the pigs growing all the time. The man who considers himself a • • • brick never boasts of being a common Marketing Is an art, and a specialty. clay specimen. • • • It sometimes happens that the wom What did your heaviest lamb weigh an who Is disappointed In love isn't at birth? disappointed in marriage. • • • A man must be in business with an Keep the lambs growing; n stunted other man or married to a woman in a good sheep. order to discover that he doesn't know lamb never makes • • • them. Plan the season ’s work during the When a man is fourni guilty of love pay you. in the first degree he should not kick winter months. • It • will • if he and his accomplice are given a Celery may be banked with earth or life sentence. boards to cause it to bleach well. • • • The manure sprender Is not a pass Honors for Potatoes ing fad. It is a labor-saver and has There never was a time ir. all Its come to stay. • • • comparatively short history when the Get a standard breed and see the potato had so much honor thrust upon It as at present In many countries, difference it makes in your poultry widely separated, its yield and its keeping experience. • • • prices are subjects of eager discussion. Clear the garden of all weeds and And yet it is only since the beginning •f last century that its value as a food refuse. This material only harbors in trouble. »product has been recognized. For sects for next year's • • • nearly 200 years after Sir Walter It Is estimated that the man who Raleigh introduced It Into England the ships 20 cars of grain containing 20 potato was subjected to a “cold neg per cent of moisture pays freight on lect" and failed to obtain any serious one car of excess water, using 15 per recognition of its many virtues. cent moisture as a basis. ¿5 GENERAL FARM NOTES