fit ma &tmm Mimmt VOL. XXII. LAKKVIKW, LAKE COUNTY, OREGON, Til U USD AY, JUNE 13, 1901. NO. 23. THE MODOC LYNCHERS! The Grand Jury Said to be in Sympathy With the Mad Law-breakers. ""iff irrrti T")tMm?nif4 tn V-flllVia AtlUJllUltU Do Their Duty if Lips That Could Tell Can be Unsealed. l-miORIAL OPINIONS ON Till: LYNCHING. l-iixhtful K llinjc of (luy Wil liam!!, Said to be Accidental, Told Hi Ikthrothed lie Would he Killed. ? p -i'!id Ut l.nk inn ly I mttiiii r. j Al n in-, I'ai. .1 n. e II - The i-X'itc- ! ineiil li ill ii'. toib- k m hill,: of ( 'it I V I fi i Hill iiud hi- thii-e film I-runk , Jaiiici mid M.iitin 1 1. til, and "ii in law Yantis, neeiiin In be i nr i cai li i instead of abat ing. 'I lie ltitcstig.tti.iii Udore the gland j'iry of .M hI.h-cuinly under due t 1 1 of Depuy Attorney tieiieril C'tiHt. N. I'll-1 and Mr. Miitrivanl l thorough, and they me probing to the iMittoin of this dastardly , cold -blooded affair. 1' mm alt. linlic-Uon; thoKU whotnnk part in the I) ricTiThg' "will' T WieTf'TtntpaiiifTt I prnhalitc thai evidence w ill In produced that will l.-ud to w lmlehale arrests and i'oih irtioiiN. The lyin -1 1 it of old man ll.ill, frotn all accounts thus far obtained, wai en tirely un iirranled, a he was a law Minding l it ieii. The only thing against him, appaicntly, is that in yearn past he consorted Willi a squaw and became the hither of a family by her that turned out to lc had men, and included those who were banned. Hall's only nflcne wax that he harbored the boys, and allowed them to live with him. The mob took tho three boy ami Y'auli out li rut . and after hanging them to the bridge, re turned to tin' hotel after the old man. They look the old man out mid w ith a roie ulMiut bin lierk, the other end tied to a railing, threw him over and allowed him to ftninglc to death. From reliable sources it baa la-en as certained that Calvin Hall waa not a bad man. He u a veteran of the Civil War and wax a member of it (iraud riiiy post in good standing. The ti.uud I'ort of thin organization is takiiiK hold of the luatler, ami money will probably he (uriiifhod to brln the )ier pet r torn of thin unwarranted killing tujiiNtioe. The evidence in clnidnK around a numtxtr of reMulents iu the vicinity of IKikout, dea- pito the apparent efforts of Rome of the mciiiliertj of the grand jury to "white waah" the whole alfuir, and probably before many days arrents may laj made, Kuiteiie Youiik, H crippled old sold ier, tell u wtury that may lead to the ar roat of the riugluudera. The old aoldier iloea not fear the reuult of what Ida UtHtimouy may lead to the wrath of the mob but bin inuiiiory ia poor, and bin Hlory iadiajointod. Young w aa at Hall'u the day previous to the lynching and tell a how a body of armed men came to the ranch, rauxacked the liouao, over powurud Hull when lie came in, and threatened to kill him then and there. "It waa about noon Thursday," said Young, "the day previous to the lynching that I saw four men driva up to Ilall'a houno. I wai'in the garden, and seeing the men heavily armed, I avoided thtiu. 1 thought they were del IHtradoea. 1 went around to lock the door of house, bot found some of the ' men inside ransacking the place, so I re- lumen to i lis garueri. i was ininmi soon after by Ism F.ades, who said hews liHiklnK for stray horses. Old man Hall came l lht house in aUiut an hour ami went inside. Moon after we )ic r) loud talking. Fades told me Ihe men were looking for the hide of a ralf that had Ucn t ilri . presumably by Hall's sons. We heard Hull nay: 'For God's mike, men, in that tlx- way t') treat me? To take my lilr w it hoiil giving me a chance?' They answered something I duln't -alch, ami then I heard Hall "Hy, 'Well, I want some kind of paper to lm for this.' They t u I k ' 1 awhile longer and then all hum' tint, mid they took ll.ill uy in a buggy. 'While the racket u going mi in the house I ssld to hades ! 1 ti they lire not going to hang the old num.' He re plied I'jiiL J I it II 'o hiik were great linemen and llial wjiiii' o 1 1 n-lli were likely I i he 1 h in bed. "I know two of the men w ho threat ened to kill Hall and I think 1 could recognize Ihe other. The two I know are J. V. lrown, the constable, unil Itnlirrl la-vcnlon.'' hades, who heard the threat to kill Hall, in a friend of Iventon and will not talk. He in as in nin an ull the other lookoiil men now here. li. ilmil U-venlon, if he wan not aetu ullv the rinirU-uder of the mob, in imj whole aHair. Ho n eoiinlanlly consiiitea by the IMikotit crowd iiH-ted of com plicity in the crime. Hln llpn are healed mi the advice of the attorney, John lin ker, who in admitted to Ui acting ou be half of the lyncher. Ix!ventoii ia a blackninith al Iookoill. One of lint lookout men, Ka-akiug of the killing of Hall and olhera, aaid today : "The fact in the a'oplu were driven into thai lynching. Tucy had the Hall in cuh tody. The hall-breeds made threat and the women of ihe whole neighborhood were terrorized. It waa feared that if the thieves were released they would Ul once burn the Iiouhcn or murder the men who hud caused their arrest. Jn that sense the lynching w as a mse of sHf-de feline. They dared not turn the Halls loose." There is evidence forthcoming that several members of the grand jury, if not a maj irity of them, are in sympathy with the lynchers. ly their ipientlons put to witnesses Ihey reveal a leaning toward the exculpation of everybody suspected. The lips of ihe leading Si nenses will not he unsealed, despite the searching questions of Heputy Attorney citeinent hist Saturday morning by the General post. j killing of Guy Williams, the 2:1 year old The 111 year old boy lynched was not gun of a well-to-do sheep owner, by Capt. the son of Calvin Hall, as heretofore John Jones. The shooting was acciden stated, but was the offspring of Hall's ul. Capt. Jones went to the Williams squaw, by an Indian named Wilson, w hom she consorted with after leaving Hall. It is hard to find a man ntu who will dispute that Calvin Hall was any thing but an upright citizen. The ap parent determination of Judge T. W. Harrington of Modoc, to probe the lynching to the bottom has worked a great change in the aspect. .ludgo Harrington was very impas sioned in his remarks to the grand jury. He declared that the good name of Mo doc county had been stained, and that ibu jury, if it hud any regard for the dig nity of the stat) or the welfare of their county, "must do their duty us they had never done it before." Judge Harring ton continued in a most earnest manner, raising his voice to a shout and waving his arms about. He declared that the lynching of Hall and the (our others without giving them a trial was good proof that the lawbreakers had no evi dence upon which to convict the victims of putty stealing. "It has not been shown," continued the Court, "that the laws are not enforced iu Modoc county. It has gone broadcast over the world that this Is a county of lawbreakers and a jiaradiso for mobburs. Yott uiuat aearch into this affair and point out the guilty partiea. The U will do the rest, and I shall not discharge you until I am thoroughly satislliHi that you have done your full duty." The lynchers and their friends are well organized. John K. Kaker, the at- torney tacitly admitted that he was re-1 tained hy the lyn 'her or their friends. I He declared in court that he would not permit an indiscriminate charge of , , . . lynching to lie against a whole neighor- I hood. "A w hole community has been railed here," said Kaker, "and it looks like an attempt to cinch some persons, guilty or innocent, for the sake of revenge or tbe rew ard that l offered. ( 1 demand lliat the charges, If there are any, 'e made against sa-cilied person. I also demand to know w bo I h wjt nesnen are." Jmlge Harringloii was very ill at ease hirinis Kaker s talk llevnually came , . , . , , out of Inn emoaras-rnenl ami onlereil Il.ikcr to ml d own. iw.iki r at lirnl refus ed to do so, but liriull did, muttering under bis breath. The Chronicle correspondent says that an oll ipiarrel between J idh'e Harring ton and K iker is said t account lor the bitterness shown. Kaker charges Judge Harrington with burning a public doeu- . , , ' . , . ment iu the courtnsim and sending him to jail for contempt. It is said that since ibis morning's epis.nle IkiIIi men are l-siking for trouoU and carrying weapons against a w'ble encounter. The tieople of M -d jt ire not uuac M.. - - .1 ... . - - - - -"' - - ma m Iwt blisxl-beil, and it remains to be seen ...1. .1. n ..f .In., in Hlli.'1111'r llli'li priinr ti iiniiv uitkj m strong enough to follow up and punish , the Calvin Hall lynchers The general sentiment iu Alturas is iu favor of pun- j parties murdered hy the lynchers in Mo ishing someUnly, but the people la-lieve, dim county the other day, was an Indian al the same lime, that the Grand Jury's j boy, and that iu consequence the Indians investigation w ill lie fruitless. They do j of that section are very uuch arouM'd, not believe that anybody (rem the though that they will attempt to retali Iiokoul ne ighlxirhinnl will have the ate upon the whites is not beln ved. So, courage to name the lynchers, though there is no doubt that some of the lynch ers could be poinied out in the crowd that haiiits a Unit the court house. Kvery man in Lookout, Gouger'a Neck ami the vicinity, with the exception of five has been subiioenaed and is iu Alturas awaiting examination. The fads of the lynching given in The Kxitminer lust week were substantially correct. KiHM'tnl tn l-ku County Examiner. Still Another Modoc Tragedy. Ai.rt'KAH, Cai.., Juno 11 Modoc coun ty wits again thrown into a fever of ex- ranch armed with a rifle. He told Mrs. Williams tnat Wesley Johnson a neigh Imr had beaten him the night previous ly, but that he was now armed for John son. Mrs. Williams inquired if the rifle was loaded and Jones answered her in the alllrmative, and raised the ride to show her, when the weapon was dis charged. Uuy Williams waa seated at the breakfast table, and opposite him sat a young lady. The bullet passed through ber hair, and struck young Williams in the forehead, crushing through his brain. The young lady was iu a reclining position, with her head rest ing upon her hand. Had she been sil ting upright the bullet would have killed her. The shooting occurred at Cedarville Pass, about 12 miles from Al turas, on the road Isstwocn the county seat and Cedarville. . Young Williams had a premonition of death. lie was to marry Miss Maude Cantrell in a few weeks, and early in the morning previous to the shooting left her at her home after a dance. When they parted at ber home, Williams said: "Good bye, Maude; I never expect to see you again; I fear I am going to be killed." The Coronor'i jury brooybt in a ver dict that Williams' daaih waa canned by Jone, but no mention ia made in the verdict that it waa accidental. Borne people arjapecl thai Joo is inaane. He haa lived for years like a hermit in a little cabin near the Williams ranch. The funeral of young Williams oc curred on Monday in Altorai, and was larly attended. Williams was quite a favorite. Miss Maude Cantrell, the young lady to whom he was betrothed, and to whom lie asserted on the morn- : '"K OI ' shooting luat she would never ',tni ''ve aaio, was chief mourner I at the rave. Her grief was pitiable. She faimed time and aeain during the ceremony. Just three hours after he hade her good bye, and told her he thought he would be kiUed, be was dead. Wholesale Murder. Rmlitint Karr hlluht . Tl.d ... u, I i . ... shocking crime that could shame a com munity pretending to civilization waa ' the lynching of five men, among them a j father and his three sons, reported from I Modm; county in Frid.iy uiomiug's Searchlight. 1 Granting that the men were stock , thieves, the amount of their llo-tis measured in money was not more than a few bun lred dollars. Men in places tfkl tw.fi,.P fltk.l IniMt m.. .1 in Ylsv.1.... .......... , , ' . too, have stolen as many thousands, , , . , ami jev me crimes were not expuiicl i y dealn al the hands of mobs. It' is safe to say that among those Isikout tnurderers were men lliem-e! vt-n a- guilty of slOvk thievery a. any one of tb.-ir victims. But the mob numbered leu to one, and were not the victims al- r.'Miiv I'll! l,t.r.l unit Imartti.xl' fl iu i . . . . , , only sucli considerations as these thai i would impel a mob to perpetrate mur- ; der in revenge lor theft. I The men who composed the Moths: mob will go unpunished of course, liut should they receive their leant deserts each would, r ul" " ' ' 111 XllV rj-VU 4vtri State's Character 5taiaed. Uecord Union : It is said that one of the victims of mob passion, one of the i then even the rude red man of the Mo- doc hills is outraged by the crime that has stained the character of the slate. Kven his untutored mind perceives that it wag cowardly and brutal to refuse so I much as a lynch court hearing to the Indian lad numbered among the victims. It is very true that the Indians them selves sometimes take their ow n offend ers in hand and send them speedily to their accounting. liut we ln-lieve that there is no case on record in tribal his tory of their failure to give an uccused person some kind of a hearing, accord ing to tribal custom, w hich to them has all the dignity and value of a court of justice under civilization. A Disgrace to California. Willows Journal: Any community may upon the occasion of some horrible or fiendish or brutal crime, become in censed and outraged to such a degree that excited citizens may have some ex cuse for putting mob law into practice. Again, a community may be harrowed to such an extent by petty crimes that a coat of tar or notice to vacate would be excused. Hut in the year of our Lord, 1901, in the commonwealth of California to think there could be collected a mob so cowardly and degraded as to hang five members of the human family for offens es no greater than those laid at the door of old man Hall, his three sons and one son-in-law in Modoc county, is enough to bring a blush of shame to every citizen of this ftate and if that fciang does not meet with retributive justice at the hands of man, they surely will at the bauds of God. Jt is about the worst rase of cold-blooded murder that disgraces the State's record. A Slap at Southern Oregon. The Attorney General and others have gone up into Modoc county, to hunt up the parties guilty ol lynching five men in Modoc county on a charge of petty stealing, one an old man of 72, and bis two boys of 19 and 13, with another old er son and a son-in-law. It is hoped that the leaders may be secured to iu- duce another hanging, as this lynching is an outrage and disgrace to California, ft is also sasperted thst the officials were in league with the lynchers. Tha old gentleman banged is said to have been a man of considerable influence, and that prejudice had a good deal to do with bis execution. If any reliance can lie placed in reports from the stock ranges, probably a number of the men engage in the lynching have stolen and branded stock not their own, a game practiced to a great extent throughout all Northern California and (Southern Oregon. Yreka Journal. Government In Reality. Oregonfan : Five men in Modoc Coun ty, Cal., were lynched by a mob which had been vorked up to fury hy depre d.itioiis of thieves, and which believed ihe victims were the culprits. If the victims were riot guilty, the cure is ef lective, fieca'ise the thieves who escapel will not dare to keep up their work. If the murdered men wer-j guilty, they will probably steal no more, at least in this life. The mob numbered many deter mined persona who took the powers of government into their owns hands and la-came in reality the government. We are prone to sublimate goverhment into an a' ml raction, and cii' b episodes are useful to keep iu our minds the true basis of govern .ent. Away Down In The Scale. Hedding Free Press: Modoc county has all at once become notorious not as a law-abiding community lull on the contrary, as a murderous community. The wholesale lvnching of men for the commission of crimes not capital places it away down the scale of civilization. If they had gone a little further and burned their victims at the stake, our fair California might have taken rank w i h Georgia w ith its dark tragedies. S(xcil ta Lake Examiner. -- l v t-y. v tfaimiv, -i .., HckpaU), N. Y. Junj II Fifteen hun dred editors arrived here last night and now have charge of the Pan-American Lxjiosition. A big time is expected. The crowds get larger each day. The grounds are nearly completed. WOOL MARKET. Opened Up Lively During: the Week and 2,000 Bags 5old. As predicted in our last issue the wool market opened brisk on Thursday, and since then over 2000 bags have been sold. F. M. Miller, forThos. Dcnnuan & sons, bought nearly 1000; J.F. Morse with Bailey Jk. Massin ;jill, buying for Hardin A Cavelry of Boston, purchased nearly 1200 bags, Mr. Morse opening the mar ket at 10 cents ; J. Frank), forJ.Kosh land it Co., of Boston, also made some purchases. As near as can be ascertain ed to date the following clips were Bold: S. B. Chandler, 1900 and 1101, 635 bags; Jcott & Adams, Cedarville, 375;Tonu Ingsen Bros., HO; M. P. Barry, 50; J. Schellhammcr, 23 ; McElhtnney A Pent 75; W. C. Dent 90; I. F. Iavies "5; Mrs. Blair A J. Snyder 50; Dan Malloy & Mau pin7ti; J. M. Keid 00; J. II. l.eehman, 120;Iteid Bros., 49; Fosket Bros., 50; Col vinJt McLaughlin, 13; Kadcliffe, 40; and various other lots amounting to about 300 bags. There is considerable more than the above amount of wool still un sold, which no doubt will also bring a good figure. The highest prhe paid waa lO', and the lowest 10 cents. Returned From Portland. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Duke returned from Portland last Saturday night after an absence of twenty-five days, during which time Mrs. Duke was in a hospital and underwent an operation for remov al of a cancer from the right breast. The oisjration was entirely successful, and Mrs. Duke returns home much im proved iu health, and with the promise that the grow th has been completely re moved. While in Portland Frank met numerous old acquaintances who for merly lived in Lakeview, and he was treated royally by them during his stay. He also met many people who made close inquiry about Lake couuty, aud several who had about concluded to come out here to find homes.