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MONTANA NEWS. J^e (•list System •WNU AJra PIBI isur .B AY THE SOCIALIST PAJKTY or NSMTANA •OL. TL HILENA MONTANA, TH1TK8DAY, NOVEMBER 14 1907. NO. 1 JURY SATISFACTORY TO ALL Rathdrum, Ida., Nov. 6. Both tides seem to be well pleated With the jury in the Adams rase. At- torney Knight, leading counsel for the prosecution, stated he was willing to leave the outcome of the case in the hands of the present jury. Complexion of the Jury. The jury and its occupation and poli- Ratthdrum, Ida., Nov. 7. Mr. J . M Gentry and Mr. Edward Htanttbury were two witnesses called by the state that have gone far to- wads strengthening Adams case in the trial now pending. These men were employed by the big timber companies in timber cruising. On one of these trips their party penetrated into the heavy, brushy woods, and there came upon the remains of a dead body lying We arc Apposed to government by injunction. We arc opposed to any method of Jurisprudence which makos a czar of a judge, al- low him to make arbitrary laws, and sentence men to jail for viola- don of his self made law. We are opposed to government by in- junction because it deprives a man of the right of a trial by a jury of his peers. We do oppose and will oppose any and all acts of court or king snbverslve of democratic institutions and destructive of alJ liberty. '•• tics are: M . Barto, Sucker Ukc, g 0 | n e ^ l t , v t m a t h a t t h e y rancher, and votes mixed ticket; Oeo. Price, 1'ost Kails, millhand, republican; C. A. Waters, Coeur d'Alenes boat cap tain, democrat W. Gorwood, Lake creek, farmer, democrat; Charles Det- temurl, Post Falls, merchant, demo- crat; H. A. Varnum, Qatar d'Alenes, carpenter, republican; John ('. Corton, Rathdruni, farmer, democrat; P. A. Mc Arthur, Mica Bay. farmer, republican; Milton I'iper, Athol, farmer, democrat; Mathcw Miller, Rathdrum, farmer, |s> mocrat; J. T. Harlan, Host, farmer de- mocrat; H. F. House, Rathdrum, ranch- er, democrat. Varnum was labor candidate for mayor at Coeur d'Alenes last spring. Miller, Dittemore and - Horlan have been members of labor unions. Nine of the jurors have been homesteaders. The state exercised all its peremp tory rights while the defense used only seven peremptory challenges, passing the panel twice Each time this priv- ilege is employed it exhausts a pcrem tory, and when the jury was complete the dt fense had but one left ia Mailt] Clarence Harrow, leading, counsel for the defense, entered objection to the state having lit peremptory chall- enges, saying the law giving it privilege was passed Adams was tried one. facta, The abjaattaa this after Hteve and was ex post was overruled, it was made on the third peremptory challenge of the state last week and met with the same fate. An exception was entered. Trial Begins. Wednesday morning the first wit newses were called by the prosecution. Mrs. Thomas, mother of Fred Tyler, was first on the stand, and related the faeti about her family coming out from Michigan from the timber tSM try—herself and two daughters and after wards Fred She described the apjearancc of Tyler and the taking up of clams through a locator, one .lack Kucrstein. Harrow's cross examination brought out that Tyler worked in the woods in Michigan that he had no money of his own but was furnished money to build his cabin and get supplies, and that Iks mother and sisters were to be located, on claims in the tame way. In several of Tyler's letters he had written his nod her not to worry about him. When Darrow asked her what there was to worry about, she said the wild animals in the woods where her son was going. Harrow said, " A r c you sure M were not afraid of the homesteaders instead of the congors!" The evidence show that in all prob- ability the Tylers Were simply a fam ily of jumpers brought out from the Michigan woodt b y B . R. Lewis to take up lands from the homesteaders for the big lumber capitalists. B. R. Lewis it one of the vilest crim- inals that ever enriched himself i n a new country by overriding the rights of the poor, ttealing and law break- ing in order to obtain his richer He it a banker and wealthy lumber man and hat made himself rich by hit Crimea. In one of Tyler'a letters be taid it waa part of the bargain that they were to get medicine from Kueratein, thr loeator. Tyler's lister gave him a revolver to take with him on thit trip, show iug that he anticipated danger left it there, and afterwards the Tyler family heard of it, and went in and took possession of it. Deputy SlierifT Williams was encountered accidentally and taken in with them. These stories completely change the complexion of the commonly accepted idea in the popular mind eoi ruing the case. It hat been generally stated that Adams was incriminated purely by his own TWO confession, and the body of Tylei found according to his own directions. The testimony of these witnesses ut- terly discredit this view. The body was found by accident, the identificn tion is very meager, and if the stat< is depending upon the half crazed con fession of a man tortured by fear and afterwards completely repudiated by him, its chances arc pretty slim to head another Federation man into eternity that way. Making an Example. The secret of the whole matter ia that the big timber companies want to make an example out of Steve Adams so that in the future no ont will interfere with their jumpers in the interest of so unimportant a factor as homesteadert. They must get some one, and Steve as a friend of Simpkins, whose claim was among those that were pimped, is a convenicct character to sacrifice. As the trial progresses Mr. Haw lev is sitting with the state's attorneys watching what t ran spires, and making frequent suggestions. Not much interest is manifested MI the trial by the towu people. The general sympathy seems to bo with Adams. The very fact that these Inn her cruising parties went up to exam ine timln-r already settled upon, show that the rights of settlers were ii»nor ed. Tyler hail had a cabin built for him on the very piece of land where Simpkins' cabin was already built and where he was living An Unwilling Witness. The testimony of George H. Root one of the settlers in the Marble Creek district, proved a remarkable corroboration of the injustice that is hea|Hi 'd upon the small property owners by the great aggregations u f capital Beet is a dapixT young fellow that clerks in a Hardware store in Boise when he it not on his claim. His ev- ery action and word allowed that he did not wish to testify for that side of the case, and had been brought there against his will. He is a person ul friend of Simpkins, and was inter isteil as all the settlers were, in de- fending their homes against the thieves that were operating under the protee tion of the big lumber companies. It seems that one Sunday the home- steaders met at an indignation meet- ing in the woods, to discuti among themselves what should be done con- cerning their homesteads and the Northern Pacific strip which had just IH'CII opened. At this meeting Adams was pretent with Simpkins, and many others whose homes were menaced by the rapacious timber thieves. These men of the woods were armed; as one witness said, " i t was unsafe to go unprotected in those days." Different onet talked at thit meeting. The discussion was as regards what the settlert should do to protect their homes. The case of one claim jumper was already in court, and a number advited that they pa tiently await the issue in this case Others were for getting the jumpers out of the country. Asking Advice. K. i ..t testified to a conversation he had with Simpkins wherein Simpkins asked his advice as to what he thought he ought to do with the maa (Tver) GOVERNMENT BY INJUNCTION EVIDENCE FAVORABLE TO ADAMS LATEST FROM SCENE OF BATTLE Rathdrum, Nov. lO. Mr. Millard, the uncle of Steve Adams, is an interesting figure at the trial. Steve was arrested on his ranch at Haines. Oregon, a short distance nit from Baker City. The kind heart •d old gentleman is a fine specimen of the old soldier, having served through the civil war on the confeder- als side. He is 71 years of age but straight ami vigorous with hair and in the office of ex-Governor Morrison before a number of witnesses. Deep Plotted Conspiracy. Adams was held without charge or preliminary examination until after his uncle got him out on a writ of habeas corpus through ex Governor Morrison whom he employed as at- toi ney. The day of the irrigation congress Mr. Millard had asked to take dinner beard yet dark. His mind has Keen with his nephew in the penitentiary, so agitated by the shocking Injustices To his surprise Warden Whitney grant- has perceived in connection with j ed the request, and he had a line din- the arrest of his nephew that he has ner with Steve and bis family. This lost all faith in any justice or recti- w a * the first time he had got to see tude under this government He has him alone tdnce his arrest. become entirely devoted to the pro- gress of this case, and says he means to see it through no matter what it costs. He says his wife is equally de- termined to stay with the sad and tragic situation tilt its final issue. As an instance of the kind heart of the old gentleman he not only has real c,I eight eihldren of his own but besides these has provided and cared for ten orphan children till they were grown. He raised Steve ami his two brothers, (although they wen' fairly fairly well grown when their mother died. Whitney called in during the visit and made this statement, "If Steve stays with the state and helps hang these men (referring to the Western Federal ion officials) he will be given complete immunity. Torture Begins. After this visit, on a pretense of aearching Hteve for anything that his uncle sjlgfcl have given him, he was stripped, taken from the woman's ward where he had been living in com Iterative comfort, and put in a mur Saver's eell The Pinkerton scavengers were then admitted to him—the whole Adams came from Park City, Ftah, ' < g H J l ,\ „, harpies. Hawley, Gooding, to his uncle's ranch in June. He had Parian. Thiele and all the rest not be,,, in hiding at all as the mine', 8 t e V ( . |,.„| ,„.,.„ j-nled f ,„ ,\. ly!i owners' side of this proposition has j in Colarado at the time of the indus spread broadcast. He was arrested ) r i a l , r( ,ul,les and was then turned out the next February He was hauling without any trial or charge. The hay when Stounenberg was killed. He . hardships he endured then seem to had located a ranch near Maker City, have un rvasj Ma When he was re His troubles and detention have very a r r ( < t ,„| he was made to believe that nearly caused him to loae it, but his : m . w ,,uld be mobbed if taken back to uncle says he thinks he can save it cdorado. f , , r u i l " When Thiele pretended to "lo-ate The mother said that Kuerstein bail who had built a house on his claim informed Iter that lawyers had been Root advised to wait till the claims retained to take .-barge of the contests if there should bo any. Mr. Thomas, the stepfather of Tyler, told hit tale of the events preceding Tyler's death, ami identified the clothes, hair and skull, which were ex- hibited. Darrow went after him strenuously on this testimony, and asked him how he could identify the hair as Tyler's when he admits that he could not iden tify his Wife's or that of his sons. He attacked him on the shape of the tkull in the same way. He also brought out that no post mortem examination wat ever held, nor Was there ever a coroner's jury. Ida Crouch-Hazlett. were settled in court. Attorney Knight kept trying to draw from Root that Simpkins had said something violent at thit meeting but his closest questioning failed to oh. it anything of the kind. The pro sedition tried to draw out what the alternative was that they wanted to do with the settlers. Root said, "to go to them and notify them that they wanted them to leave the country.' Steve Logan was another settler who waa at this protest meeting, that was summoned by the state. He proved equally unwilling to testify for the prosecution, and was equally efllcaci oua to the cause of Adams. Ida Crouch-Hazlett. After Orchard's "confession" a Caldwell attorney filed the complaint against Adams on which he was arrest ed. Detective Thiele went out and made the arrest and announced that he had "located'' Adams, whereas it had never been the slightest difficulty to "locate" him. Instead of being taken to the Caldwell jail, he was •has straight through to Boise with his family and lodged in the pen- itent iray where he was kept for seven months without bail, and without a harge being lodged against him. Closely Guarded. No one was allowed to see him ex ept the guards and the aristocrats of the Idaho republican administration— leesUagi Borah, Hawley and all that swarm of capitalist parasites. Three imea his uncle tried to see him, but ould never get to him except in the presence of the guards. Hi* mail was all -.pen.'.I and read by the warden Hi> was shut off from any communi ation with the outside world or any onfideutuil relations with his friends. Immediately after the arrest of Adams, Mr. Millard, who was in Texas, wroto a former friend of his, one M . S Bond,,to get C. A. Moore, a lawyer of Baker city, and go to Boise and try and get bail for him. Moore and Bond went to see Gooding the first thing when they arrived at Boise. Through some unexplained oversight Adams lay in the penitentiary a long time with no attention from the Fed- eration. It was then that Gooding furnished the traitor Moore with mon ey to go to Colorado and see the gov crnor, and seo if he could not obtain immunity for Adams, provided he would corroborate Orchard. There can be no question about skis latter instance as Moore admitted this him, he phoned Brown, the sheriff at Baker City, who came out bringing several others with him. Brown said to Steve, " I am on the inside; do what they want you to, and you'll be back* in a few days." A t M r . Millard'I expense on the preceding trial Brown came to Wallace and testified to this for the defense. So one can set- which side would have the incentive to blow him up, the Pinkertotis or the defense In regard to the Phillips' yarn about dynamite being found in their vard in-Spokane, it is fishy with a Pin kerton flavor from the start. If the tale were genuine why litis no invest! gallon been made. It is hardly likely that Thiele's Piukertous would over look a bet like that. Yet, no detei tu.s have been put to work. An why 10 pounds with caps in a pail when one jioiiiid would blow up the whole neighborhood f Forcing the Confession. So far as the "confession" is con eerned, Steve couldn't have written it if he had tried. He has no education The human harpies fixed it up to auit themselves, took Steve to a notary, and he signed it. He thought he was gone anyway and it made no difference what he did. Although Mr. Millard could not see his nephew alone, ho could see him in the presence of Mooro, the man who had betrayed him. The real purpose of this whole shameful persecution is to get Steve to swear against the Colorada men, and thin support Orchard'i wonderful revelation*, Vitherwise unsupported. The traitor Moore admiti that flood ing, Borah and Hawley paid him a handsome fee. Continued on Page 4.) MRS. HAZLETT ON TRIAL On Friday, November 15, Mrs Hae- leU's trial comos off in the superior court at Spokane. The struggle ahe is making against the unjust tyranny and imposition of the capitalist courts is all the hanler as local Spokane, led by a number of would be pecudo socialist*, has deserted to the enemy. ^ This free speech struggle that the state of Washington is waging with the authorities is of the utmost im- portance to the future dissemination uf the soeialist doctrine. Whatever aid the fellow workers of Mrs. liar, lot ciui bring to the issue, will neveT be more needed. She is fighting this battle for us all, not in her own inter cat at all but against it, and certainly no one but a coward will leave ber to bear the brunt of the fight alone If we cannot all be arrested and go to jail for maintaining the rights of a free people, we can loyally stand by and support those who do. The report of the trial will be given our next issue. Rathdrum, Ida., Nov. 9. Kverything is encouraging for the defendant in the Steve Adams case so far. There is nothing that directly connects him with the crime of killing Fred Tyler, and the indirect evidence is only such as might be adduced in any frontier warfare; where there are two factions in a community that hate each other, and especially where there is so much at stake as a bitter contest farmers and poor men who have settled on the land under the provis- ions of the government, to make homes for themselves, and have a place on Sod's green earth, and a bunch of robber jumpers paid by great capital- istic interests to break the law and de prive the working class of their rights. Steve was with his friend Simpkins whose claim had been jumped. Both were members of the Western F*>1 ration and that was vnough to con- nect them with murders and dvna mite according to that avenging angel f the Mine Owners' Association, Sleuth McParlan. It is the opinion of those who have II..wed the chain of events closely that not a hair of Steve Adams' head will ever be touched. Not only is sll evidence lacking against him but it is not believable that any jury of poor hard working farmers in this country, as these man are, will ever bring in any verdict anywhere in favor of the timber robbers and against honest settlers. Fair Trial. The court proceedings arc being con lucted ill as fair a manner ;is could be expecte I under a system of laws ami institutions based upon the monu mental crime of the despoliation of he working class ami the robbery and murder of the highest hopes and op- portunities of the human race. lodge Woons is a very kind, pleas- ant man, and his rulings are giving the defendant the extreme latitude that the law allows him. No one can complain of his lack of < turtesy to the attorneys for the defense. In fact he has said that Harrow was the strongest man he ever saw at the bar. Very little interest is manifested in the case by the townspeople of Rath drum, even the tiny courtroom being filled only a portion of the time. Steve is being treated as well as could be expected under the eircum stances. The sheriff has relaxed the lose confinement in which he was held at first. It was having a very bad effect on the eyes of Adams, and tin ally the doctor said he would go blind unless he was given outdoor exercise, and now every day he may be seen •ut with Sheriff Mat-Donald or a bai liff taking a walk ab tut town. He bj always very neatly dressed, anil as one meets the two men there is nothing to indicate that a desperate Federa tion murderi r is walking loose around lasva. Corrupting Capitalist Press. The capitalist papers are doing ex actly as they did in southern Idaho using every sinister and vicious means to misrepresent the facts, malign tin Federation, and prejudice the minds of the public against the Federation men through the avenues of this case Every absurd and on the face of it fake tale is trotted out in sober earn est as reliable material. The Fed eration men are branded as criminals in every line of its prostituted m ports. It is even rivaling the States man in its unprincipled tight against these working men and is making it self so obnoxious to the working class and in fact all fair minded people throughout the Rathdrum cominun u v that its circulation has fallen off per cept bly. In fact a movement it on foot to boycott it completely through out this distn.t. Its reporter, Static has aroused a great deal of antagonism and dislike not only by the utterly false reports he is printing but by his unpopular and bulldozing ways. It it even stated that he is one of the rattiest Pinkertons and spies em ployed against the Federal ion. Of brutal and stocky physical demeanor he is most insulting to the socialists about town, even using violence am offensive language. So unpopular is he that there is liable to be trouble over his presence at the trial as th repieseiitative of the Review. The Rathdrum Tribi makes feeble echo of itl pace setter, the Re view, aiming to prejudice and poison the minds of the ] pie through its untruthful report!. It stated that tin Spokesman reporter went on the stand and reiterated that Mrs. Hazlctt ha stated to him that she was goiug to Rathdurm to educate the Adams jury a deliberate falsehood as the reporter had denied expressly that she sai that, the statement being in the head lines which he admitted j»ere written by another party. But what is a little one horse capitalist sheet for that is starving on the ragged edge of syco- phancy if it is not to lickspittle to i t l capitalist bosses that feed it on the political crumbs from the plutoeratie table. Ida Crouch-Hazlett. th. ti. Rathdrum, Ida., Nov. 9. On Thursday the prosecution under- took to introduce the testimony of her and Mrs. Archie Phillips that waa given at the Wallace trial. The Phillips people were jumpers from the Marble Creek district who gave the most emphatic evidence against Adams at the previous trial. They belonged to the crowd of claim jumpers who were banded together to deprive the lawful settlers of their rights. Prosecuting Attorney Knight made affidavit that the state had tried in every possible way to get these valuable witnesses to BS SfSBSal But they had left the jurisdiction of the state and gone out of the country en- tirely and could not be found. Mr. Knight further affirmed that the Phil- lips people had stated that they had U-en so terrified by threats of violence, the attempted dynamiting of their home and other outrages that they feared to give any more testimony against the Federation members. Mrs. Phillips' health was in a state of ner- vous collapse and Phillips had lost hit job and could not get work, and since the blowing up of Sheriff Brown, he thought the best thing he could do for himself was to get out of the coun- try. Heyburn, the Demagogue. A sensation which was a veritable explosion o f . a political bomb in the Idaho situating, was caused by Knight reading a letter from Senator Heyburn relative to Phillips' appoint- ment to a government job because of the service he had rendered the state by his testimony in the Adams case. It seems that the understanding was that Phillips was to be rewarded for his zeal in behalf of the state in these ises by an appointment to a govern- ment position as timber cruiser upon (Case* d'.Mentis Indian reserva- •in. C. .1. Shoemaker, treasurer of Kootenai county, a political go be- ween}, made application for Phillips o Senator Heyburn. But Heyburn had got wise His party is after the scalps f the officials of the Federation, but an't get along without their votes. He knows the voting strength of the •deration in Idaho. Hence in spite f the service that claim juti p> r Phil- ipps has rendered the state author- ities in trying to bring about the con- iction of Adams, Heyburn it sudden- i' streek by gripping pain* in his hitherto elastic conscience and writes i Shoemaker that he has diseovt red that Phillips was a HIM.per, and a iidgment was in court against him oa that charge, ami his appointment w;;« >ut of the question. It leaked out that Shoemaker him stdf was •he man that wrote to the land fflce about Phillips, and thence in- formed Heyburn,of the facts in the ase. Howevtr. Heyburn throw* Phil ips overboard rather than go before the Federation voters with him as an incubus. According to the lettsr presented by Knight, Phillips gets It back by cutting his job as informer, and the Adams prosecution is left angling in the air metaphorically where it is their dear desire to have \dains dangling physically. Pinkertonish Rubbish. The melodramatic phtute of blood, thunder and brimatone. has the old Pinkerton flavor. But the frame-up waa effective. Violate Constitutional Right. Mr. Darrow made vigorous protcet against any documentary evidvnee be- iug introduced against Adams where the defendant had no oportunity to face his answers. The judge sent the jury out ami the case was argued. Knight said the parties were beyt ud the jurisdiction of the court. He had |aBSSi them to Portland, and from the best he could learn, they were now in British Columbia. Mr. Knight mad" these statements under outh on the stand. Darrow asked him if when ht> was in Spokane hunting the dynamite, he *av» Thiele, the dective also. Knight ad.nit'ed that he talketl to Thiele. Mr. Harrow then wanted to kuow if h" had heard any- thing about who hail killed our wit ness, Harvey Brown. Judge MeH.II made the argument on tin* competency of il witnesses. The Idaho statute carries no provis- ion for east evidence. The right ia u fundamental one derived from Mag na i 'hart i that a man act used must be facet! by his accusers. The state has not this right, but a defendant has. The Idaho law is explicit snd the utmost that ca: be done is to da- (Coatiaued on Page t.) i

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Page 1: MONTANA NEWS (•list System . J^e •WNU AJra PIBI isur AY ... · MONTANA NEWS (•list System . J^e •WNU AJra PIBI isur.B AY THE SOCIALIST PAJKTY or NSMTANA •OL. TL HILENA MONTANA,

M O N T A N A N E W S . J e (•list System

• W N U AJra PIBI isur.B A Y T H E S O C I A L I S T P A J K T Y o r N S M T A N A

•OL. TL H I L E N A MONTANA, TH1TK8DAY, N O V E M B E R 14 1907. NO. 1

JURY SATISFACTORY TO A L L Rathdrum, Ida., Nov. 6.

Both tides seem to be well pleated

With the jury in the Adams rase. At­

torney Knight, leading counsel for the

prosecution, stated he was willing to

leave the outcome of the case in the

hands of the present jury.

Complexion of the Jury.

The jury and its occupation and poli-

Ratthdrum, Ida., Nov. 7. Mr. J . M Gentry and Mr. Edward

Htanttbury were two witnesses called by the state that have gone far to-wads strengthening Adams case in the trial now pending. These men were employed by the big timber companies in timber cruising. On one of these trips their party penetrated into the heavy, brushy woods, and there came upon the remains of a dead body lying

We a r c A p p o s e d t o g o v e r n m e n t by injunction. We arc opposed to any method o f Jurisprudence which makos a czar of a judge, al­low him to make arbitrary laws, and sentence men to jail for viola-don of his self made law. We are opposed to government by in­junction because it deprives a man of the right of a trial by a jury of his peers. We do oppose and will oppose any and all acts of court or king snbverslve of democratic institutions and destructive of alJ liberty.

'•• t ics are: M . B a r t o , Sucker U k c , g 0 | n e ^ l t , v t m a t h a t t h e y

rancher , and votes m i x e d t i c k e t ; Oeo.

P r i c e , 1'ost Ka i l s , m i l l h a n d , r epub l i can ;

C . A . Waters , Coeur d ' A l e n e s boat cap

t a i n , democrat W . G o r w o o d , L a k e

creek, f a rmer , democra t ; Char les Det-

temur l , Post F a l l s , merchant , demo­

c ra t ; H. A . V a r n u m , Qatar d ' A l e n e s ,

carpenter, r e p u b l i c a n ; J o h n ('. Cor ton ,

Ra thdrun i , f a rmer , democra t ; P . A . M c

A r t h u r , M i c a B a y . f a r m e r , republ ican ;

M i l t o n I ' iper , A t h o l , f a r m e r , democrat ;

M a t h c w M i l l e r , R a t h d r u m , farmer , |s>

mocra t ; J . T. H a r l a n , Host , f a rmer de­

mocra t ; H . F . House, R a t h d r u m , ranch­

er, democrat.

Va rnum was labor candidate for

mayor at Coeur d ' A l e n e s last sp r ing .

M i l l e r , D i t t emore a n d - H o r l a n have

been members of labor unions. N i n e

of the jurors have been homesteaders.

The state exerc ised a l l its peremp

tory r igh ts whi le the defense used on ly

seven peremptory chal lenges, pass ing

the panel twice E a c h t ime this p r iv ­

i lege is employed it exhausts a pcrem

tory , and when the j u r y was complete

the dt fense had but one lef t ia Mailt] Clarence H a r r o w , l e a d i n g , counsel

f o r the defense, entered objec t ion to

the state h a v i n g lit peremptory chal l ­

enges, s ay ing the l aw g i v i n g it

p r i v i l e g e was passed

Adams was t r i ed one.

facta, T h e abjaattaa

t h i s a f t e r Hteve

and was ex post was overruled,

it was made on the t h i r d peremptory chal lenge of the state last week and met w i t h the same f a t e . A n except ion was entered.

Tria l Begins.

Wednesday morn ing the first wi t

newses were ca l led by the prosecution.

M r s . Thomas , mother of Fred T y l e r ,

was first on the s tand, and related the

faeti about her f a m i l y coming out

f r o m M i c h i g a n f r o m the t imber tSM

t ry—herse l f and t w o daughters and

a f t e r wards F r e d S h e described the

apjearancc o f T y l e r and the t a k i n g up

of clams through a locator , one . lack

K u c r s t e i n .

H a r r o w ' s cross e x a m i n a t i o n brought

out that T y l e r w o r k e d i n the woods

i n M i c h i g a n that he had no money o f

his own but was f u r n i s h e d money to

bu i ld his cab in and get supplies, and

that Iks mother and sisters were to

be located, on c la ims i n the tame way . In several of T y l e r ' s let ters he had

w r i t t e n his nod her not to w o r r y about h im. When D a r r o w asked her what there was to w o r r y about, she said the w i l d an ima l s i n the woods where her son was go ing .

Harrow said , " A r c y o u sure M were not a f r a i d of the homesteaders instead of the c o n g o r s ! "

The evidence show that in a l l prob­a b i l i t y the T y l e r s Were s i m p l y a f a m i l y of jumpers b rought out f r o m the M i c h i g a n woodt b y B . R . L e w i s to take up lands f r o m the homesteaders f o r the b i g lumber cap i ta l i s t s .

B. R. L e w i s i t one of the vi les t c r im­ina ls that ever enr iched himself i n a new count ry by o v e r r i d i n g the r ights of the poor, t t e a l i n g and law break­i n g in order to ob ta in h i s r i c h e r H e

it a banker and wealthy lumber man

and hat made himself rich by hit

Crimea. In one of Tyler'a letters be taid it

waa part of the bargain that they were to get medicine from Kueratein, thr loeator.

Tyler's lister gave him a revolver to take with him on thit trip, show iug that he anticipated danger

l e f t i t there, and a f t e r w a r d s the T y l e r f a m i l y heard of i t , and went in and took possession o f i t . Deputy SlierifT W i l l i a m s was encountered acc iden ta l l y and taken in w i t h them. These s tor ies completely change the complex ion of the commonly accepted idea i n the

popular mind eoi r u i n g the case. It hat been genera l ly s ta ted that A d a m s was i n c r i m i n a t e d purely by his own

T W O confess ion, and the body of T y l e i f o u n d acco rd ing to his own di rec t ions . The test imony o f these witnesses ut­te r ly discredi t th i s v i ew. The body was f o u n d by accident , the iden t i f i cn t ion is very meager, and i f the stat< is depending u p o n the ha l f crazed con fess ion of a man tor tured by f e a r and a f t e r w a r d s comple te ly repudia ted by him, i ts chances arc p re t ty s l i m to head another Federa t ion man in to e te rn i ty that way .

Making an Example. The secret of the whole mat ter i a

tha t the b i g t imber companies want to make an example out of S t eve A d a m s so that i n the f u t u r e no ont w i l l in te r fe re w i t h thei r j umpers i n the interest of so unimpor tant a f a c t o r as homesteadert . They must get some one, and Steve as a f r i e n d of S i m p k i n s , whose c la im was among those that were pimped, is a convenicct charac ter to sacr i f ice .

A s the t r i a l progresses M r . H a w lev is s i t t i n g w i t h the s ta te ' s a t torneys wa tch ing what t ran spires, and m a k i n g f requent suggestions.

Not much interest is man i f e s t ed M I the t r i a l by the towu people. The general s y m p a t h y seems to bo w i t h Adams. The very fac t that these Inn her c ru i s ing par t ies went up to exam ine t imln-r a l ready set t led upon, show that the r igh t s of sett lers were ii»nor ed. T y l e r hai l had a cabin bu i l t f o r h im on the v e r y piece of land where S i m p k i n s ' c a b i n was a l ready bui l t and where he was l i v i n g

A n Unwilling Witness. The t e s t imony of George H . Root

one of the set t lers in the M a r b l e Creek d i s t r i c t , proved a r emarkab le corroborat ion of the in jus t i ce that is hea|Hi 'd upon the small proper ty owners by the great aggregat ions u f c ap i t a l Beet is a d a p i x T y o u n g f e l l o w that c l e rks in a Hardware store in Boise when he i t not on his c l a i m . H i s ev­ery act ion and word al lowed that he d i d not wish to t e s t i f y f o r that s ide of the case, and had been brought there against h is w i l l . H e is a person ul f r i e n d of S i m p k i n s , and was inter i s t e i l as a l l the settlers were, i n de­f e n d i n g their homes against the th ieves that were opera t ing under the protee t ion of the b i g lumber companies .

It seems that one Sunday the home­steaders met at an ind igna t ion meet­i n g in the woods, to d i s c u t i among themselves wha t should be done con­ce rn ing thei r homesteads and the Nor the rn P a c i f i c s t r ip w h i c h had jus t I H ' C I I opened.

A t th i s mee t ing A d a m s was pretent w i t h S i m p k i n s , and many others whose homes were menaced by the rapacious t imber th ieves . These men of the woods were a rmed ; as one wi tness sa id , " i t was unsafe to go unprotec ted in those d a y s . " D i f f e r e n t onet t a l k e d at t h i t mee t ing . The discuss ion was as regards wha t the settlert should do to protect their homes. The case of one c l a i m jumper was already in court, and a number advited that they pa t i e n t l y awa i t the issue in this case Others were for g e t t i n g the jumpers out of the coun t ry .

Asking Advice. K. i . . t testified to a conversa t ion he

had w i t h S i m p k i n s where in Simpkins asked his advice as to what he thought he ought to do w i t h the maa (Tver)

GOVERNMENT BY INJUNCTION EVIDENCE F A V O R A B L E TO A D A M S

L A T E S T FROM SCENE OF B A T T L E R a t h d r u m , N o v . l O .

M r . M i l l a r d , the uncle of S teve

A d a m s , is an in teres t ing figure at the

t r i a l . S t e v e was arrested on his ranch

at Ha ines . Oregon, a short d is tance

nit f r o m B a k e r C i t y . The k i n d heart

•d o ld gent leman is a fine specimen

of the o ld soldier , h a v i n g served

through the c i v i l wa r on the confeder­

als s ide. He is 71 years of age but

s t ra ight a m i vigorous w i t h ha i r a n d

in the office of ex-Governor M o r r i s o n

be fo re a number of witnesses.

Deep P l o t t e d Consp i racy .

Adams was held wi thout charge or

pre l iminary e x a m i n a t i o n un t i l a f t e r

his uncle got h im out on a wr i t o f

habeas corpus through ex Governor

M o r r i s o n whom he employed as at-

toi ney.

The day of the i r r i g a t i o n congress

Mr. M i l l a r d had asked to take d inner

beard yet da rk . H i s mind has Keen w i t h his nephew in the peni ten t ia ry ,

so ag i t a t ed by the shock ing Injus t ices T o his surprise W a r d e n W h i t n e y grant-

has perce ived in connect ion w i t h j ed the request, a n d he had a l ine din-

the arrest of his nephew that he has ner w i t h Steve and bis f a m i l y . T h i s

lost a l l f a i t h in any jus t i ce or rec t i - w a * the first t ime he had got to see

tude under th is government H e has h i m alone tdnce his arrest .

become en t i re ly devoted to the pro­gress of th i s case, and says he means to see it th rough no matter wha t i t costs. He says his w i f e is equal ly de­te rmined to stay w i t h the sad a n d t ragic s i t u a t i o n t i l t i ts f ina l issue.

A s an instance of the k i n d heart of the old gent leman he not only has real c,I eight e ih ldren o f his own but besides these has p rov ided and ca red f o r ten orphan ch i ld ren t i l l they were g r o w n . He raised Steve ami his two brothers , (although they w e n ' f a i r l y f a i r l y wel l g rown when their mother d ied .

Whi tney ca l l ed i n d u r i n g the v i s i t and made this s tatement , " I f Steve s tays wi th the state and helps hang these men ( r e f e r r i n g to the Wes te rn Federa l ion o f f i c i a l s ) he w i l l be given

• complete immun i ty . T o r t u r e Beg ins .

A f t e r this v i s i t , on a pretense of aearching Hteve f o r a n y t h i n g that his uncle sjlgfcl have g i v e n h im, he was s t r ipped, taken f r o m the woman ' s wa rd where he had been l i v i n g in com Iterative comfor t , and put in a mur Saver's eell The P i n k e r t o n scavengers were then admi t t ed to h im—the whole

Adams came f r o m P a r k C i t y , F t a h , '< g H J l , \ „ , harpies. H a w l e y , Good ing , M« to h is u n c l e ' s ranch in J u n e . He had P a r i a n . Th ie le and a l l the rest not be,, , in h i d i n g at a l l as the mine ' , 8 t e V ( . | , .„ | ,„.,.„ j-nled f , „ , \ . l y ! i

o w n e r s ' s ide of th is p ropos i t ion h a s j i n Colarado at the t ime of the indus spread broadcast . He was arrested ) r i a l , r ( , u l , l e s and was then turned out the next F e b r u a r y H e was h a u l i n g w i t h o u t a n y t r i a l or charge. The hay when S tounenberg was k i l l e d . H e . hardships he endured then seem to had located a ranch near Maker C i t y , have un rvasj M a W h e n he was re H i s t roubles and detent ion have ve ry a r r ( < t , „ | he was made to bel ieve that near ly caused h i m to loae i t , but h is : m . w , , u l d be mobbed i f taken back to uncle says he t h i n k s he can save i t c d o r a d o . f , , r u i l " When T h i e l e pretended to " l o - a t e

The mother sa id that K u e r s t e i n bai l who had bu i l t a house on his c l a i m i n f o r m e d Iter that l awyers had been Root adv ised to wait t i l l the c l a i m s retained to take .-barge of the contests

if there should bo any. Mr. Thomas, the stepfather of Tyler,

told hit tale of the events preceding Tyler's death, ami identified the clothes, hair and skull, which were ex­hibited.

Darrow went after him strenuously on this testimony, and asked him how he could identify the hair as Tyler's when he admits that he could not iden tify his Wife's or that of his sons. He attacked him on the shape of the tkull in the same way. He also brought out that no post mortem examination wat ever held, nor Was there ever a coroner's jury.

Ida Crouch-Hazlett.

were settled i n court. A t t o r n e y K n i g h t kept t r y i n g to

draw f r o m Root that Simpkins had said something violent at t h i t mee t ing but his closest ques t ion ing f a i l e d to oh. it a n y t h i n g of the k i n d . T h e pro s e d i t i o n t r i ed to draw out what the a l t e rna t ive w a s that they wan ted to do w i t h the set t lers . Root said, "to go to them and n o t i f y them that they wanted them to leave the c o u n t r y . '

S teve Logan was another se t t ler who waa at th is protest meet ing , that was summoned b y the state . H e p roved equal ly u n w i l l i n g to t e s t i f y f o r the prosecution, and was equa l ly e f l l c a c i oua to the cause of A d a m s .

Ida C r o u c h - H a z l e t t .

A f t e r O r c h a r d ' s " c o n f e s s i o n " a C a l d w e l l a t torney f i led the compla in t against A d a m s on wh ich he was arrest ed. De tec t ive T h i e l e went out and made the arrest and announced that he had " l o c a t e d ' ' A d a m s , whereas it had never been the sl ightest d i f f i c u l t y to " l o c a t e " h im. Instead of b e i n g t a k e n to the C a l d w e l l j a i l , he w a s •has s t ra ight through to Boise w i t h

his f a m i l y and lodged in the pen­itent i ray where he was kept f o r seven months wi thout b a i l , and wi thout a harge b e i n g lodged against h i m .

Closely Guarded. No one was a l lowed to see h im ex

ept the guards and the ar i s tocra ts of the Idaho repub l i can a d m i n i s t r a t i o n — leesUagi Bo rah , H a w l e y and a l l that

s w a r m of cap i t a l i s t parasi tes. Three imea his uncle t r i ed to see h i m , but ou ld never get to h im except in the

presence o f the guards. H i * m a i l was al l -.pen.'.I and read by the warden Hi> was shut off f r o m any c o m m u n i a t i o n w i t h the outs ide wor ld or any onf ideu tu i l re la t ions w i t h his f r i e n d s .

I m m e d i a t e l y a f t e r the ar res t of A d a m s , M r . M i l l a r d , who was i n Texas , wro to a f o r m e r f r i e n d of his, one M . S B o n d , , t o get C . A . M o o r e , a l a w y e r of B a k e r c i t y , and go to Boise and t r y and get b a i l f o r h i m . Moore and B o n d went to see G o o d i n g the first t h i n g when they a r r i v e d at Boise .

T h r o u g h some unexp la ined ove r s igh t A d a m s lay i n the p e n i t e n t i a r y a l o n g t i m e w i t h no a t t en t ion f r o m the F e d ­e ra t ion . It was then that G o o d i n g f u r n i s h e d the t r a i to r M o o r e w i t h mon ey to go to Colorado and see the gov crnor , and seo if he c o u l d not ob t a in i m m u n i t y f o r A d a m s , p r o v i d e d he w o u l d corrobora te O r c h a r d .

There can be no quest ion about skis l a t t e r instance as Moore admi t t ed this

h im, he phoned B r o w n , the sheriff at Bake r C i t y , who came out b r i n g i n g several others w i t h h i m . B r o w n sa id to Steve, " I am on the ins ide ; do what they want y o u to, a n d y o u ' l l be back* in a f e w d a y s . " A t M r . M i l l a r d ' I expense on the preced ing t r i a l B r o w n came to W a l l a c e a n d tes t i f ied to this for the defense. S o one can set- which side would have the incen t ive to b low him up, the P inke r to t i s or the defense

In regard to the P h i l l i p s ' y a r n about d y n a m i t e b e i n g f o u n d i n thei r vard in -Spokane , it is fishy wi th a P i n kerton flavor f r o m the start. I f the tale were genuine why litis no invest! ga l lon been made. It is hardly l i k e l y that T h i e l e ' s P i u k e r t o u s would over l o o k a bet l i k e that . Yet , no detei t u . s have been put to w o r k . A n why 10 pounds w i t h caps in a pa i l when one j io i i i id wou ld blow up the whole ne ighborhood f

Forcing the Confession. So f a r as the " c o n f e s s i o n " is con

eerned, S teve c o u l d n ' t have w r i t t e n i t i f he had t r i e d . He has no educat ion The human harpies f ixed i t up to aui t themselves, took S teve to a notary , and he signed i t . H e thought he was gone anyway and it made no di f ference wha t he d id .

Al though M r . M i l l a r d could not see his nephew alone, ho could see h i m i n the presence o f M o o r o , the man who had be t rayed h i m .

The rea l purpose o f th is whole s h a m e f u l pe r secu t ion is to get S teve to swear agains t the Co lo rada men, and t h i n support O r c h a r d ' i w o n d e r f u l revelat ion*, Vi the rwise unsupported.

The t r a i t o r M o o r e a d m i t i that f lood ing, Borah and H a w l e y pa id him a handsome fee.

C o n t i n u e d o n P a g e 4.)

MRS. H A Z L E T T ON TRIAL On F r i d a y , N o v e m b e r 15, M r s Hae-

l e U ' s t r i a l comos off in the super ior

court a t Spokane . The s t ruggle ahe

is m a k i n g agains t the unjust t y r anny

and i m p o s i t i o n of the cap i t a l i s t cour ts

is al l the han l e r as l o c a l Spokane ,

led by a number of w o u l d be pecudo

socialist*, has deserted to the enemy.

^ T h i s f r e e speech s t rugg le that the

state of Washington is w a g i n g w i t h

the authorities is of the utmost im­

portance to the future dissemination

uf the soeialist doctrine. Whatever

aid the f e l l o w worke r s of M r s . l iar ,

lot ciui b r i n g to the issue, w i l l neveT

be more needed. She is fighting th is

bat t le f o r us a l l , not in her own in te r

cat at a l l but aga ins t i t , and c e r t a in ly

no one but a c o w a r d w i l l leave ber

to bear the brunt o f the fight alone

If we cannot a l l be arrested and

go to j a i l f o r m a i n t a i n i n g the r ights

of a f r ee people, we can l o y a l l y s tand

by and suppor t those who do.

The report of the t r i a l w i l l be g i v e n

our next issue.

R a t h d r u m , Ida., N o v . 9. K v e r y t h i n g is encouraging f o r the

defendant i n the Steve A d a m s case so f a r . There is n o t h i n g that d i r ec t l y connects h im w i t h the cr ime of k i l l i n g F r e d T y l e r , and the indi rec t evidence is only such as might be adduced in any f r o n t i e r w a r f a r e ; where there are two f a c t i ons in a communi ty that hate each other, and especia l ly where there is so much at s take as a b i t t e r contest

f a rmer s and poor men who have se t t led on the l and under the provis­ions of the government , to make homes f o r themselves, and have a place on Sod's green ear th , and a bunch of

robber jumpers pa id by great cap i ta l ­i s t ic interests to break the law and de p r i v e the w o r k i n g class o f t he i r r ights .

Steve was w i t h his f r i e n d S i m p k i n s whose c l a i m had been jumped . B o t h were members of the Wes te rn F*>1

ra t ion and that was vnough to con­nect them w i t h murders and dvna mi te acco rd ing to that aveng ing angel

f the M i n e O w n e r s ' A s s o c i a t i o n , S leu th M c P a r l a n .

I t i s the op in ion o f those who have • II..wed the cha in of events closely

that not a hai r of S teve A d a m s ' head w i l l ever be touched. N o t o n l y is sll evidence l a c k i n g against h im but it is not be l i evab le that any j u r y o f poor hard w o r k i n g f a rmers in this count ry , as these man are, w i l l ever b r i n g in any verd ic t anywhere in f a v o r of the t imber robbers and against honest sett lers.

F a i r T r i a l . The court proceedings arc b e i n g con

lucted i l l as f a i r a manner ; is could be expecte I under a system of laws ami ins t i tu t ions based upon the monu mental c r ime o f the despol ia t ion of he w o r k i n g class ami the robbery and

murder of the highest hopes and op­por tun i t i e s of the human race.

l o d g e Woons is a very k i n d , pleas­ant man, and his ru l ings are g i v i n g the defendant the extreme la t i tude that the l aw a l lows h i m . N o one can compla in of his lack of < turtesy to the a t torneys f o r the defense. In fact he has sa id that Har row was the strongest man he ever saw at the bar.

V e r y l i t t l e interest is man i fes t ed in the case by the townspeople of Rath d rum, even the t i ny cour t room be ing filled on ly a por t ion o f the t ime .

Steve is be ing t reated as w e l l as could be expected under the e i rcum stances. The sher i f f has re laxed the

lose confinement in which he was held at first . It was h a v i n g a v e r y bad effect on the eyes o f Adams, and tin a l ly the doctor sa id he would go b l i n d unless he was g i v e n outdoor exercise, and now every day he may be seen •ut w i t h S h e r i f f Mat-Donald or a bai

l i f f t a k i n g a w a l k ab tut t own . He bj a lways v e r y nea t ly dressed, ani l as one meets the two men there is no th ing to ind ica te that a desperate Federa t ion murderi r is w a l k i n g loose around lasva.

C o r r u p t i n g C a p i t a l i s t P ress . The cap i t a l i s t papers are d o i n g ex

ac t ly as they d id in southern Idaho using eve ry s in i s te r and v i c i o u s means to misrepresent the fac t s , m a l i g n tin Fede ra t i on , and pre jud ice the minds of the pub l ic against the Federa t ion men th rough the avenues of th i s case E v e r y absurd and on the face of i t f a k e tale is t ro t ted out i n sober earn est as re l i ab le ma te r i a l . T h e F e d era t ion men are branded as c r i m i n a l s i n every l ine of i t s p ros t i tu ted m ports. It is even r i v a l i n g the States man in i t s unp r inc ip l ed tight against these w o r k i n g men and is m a k i n g it se l f so obnoxious to the w o r k i n g class and in f a c t a l l f a i r minded people throughout the Ra thd rum cominun u v that i t s c i r c u l a t i o n has f a l l e n off per cept bly . In f ac t a movement i t on foo t to boycot t i t comple te ly through out th is d i s t n . t . Its reporter , S t a t i c has aroused a great deal of an tagonism and d i s l i k e not only by the u t t e r ly false reports he is p r i n t i n g but by his unpopular and b u l l d o z i n g ways . It i t even s ta ted that he is one of the

ratt iest P i n k e r t o n s and spies em ployed against the Federa l i on . O f bru ta l and s tocky phys ica l demeanor he is most i n s u l t i n g to the social is ts about t own , even us ing v io lence am of fens ive language. So unpopular is he that there is l i ab le to be trouble over his presence at the t r i a l as th rep iese i i ta t ive of the Rev iew.

The R a t h d r u m T r i b i makes feeble echo o f i t l pace setter, the Re view, a i m i n g to pre judice and poison the minds of the ] pie through i ts u n t r u t h f u l report! . It stated that tin Spokesman reporter went on the stand and re i te ra ted that M r s . H a z l c t t ha stated to h i m that she was go iug to Ra thdurm to educate the A d a m s ju ry a de l ibera te fa l sehood as the reporter had den ied express ly that she sai that, the s ta tement be ing in the head lines w h i c h he admi t t ed j » e r e w r i t t e n by another party. B u t what is a l i t t l e one horse cap i t a l i s t sheet f o r that is

s t a rv ing on the ragged edge of syco­phancy i f i t is not to l i cksp i t t l e to i t l cap i ta l i s t bosses that feed i t on the p o l i t i c a l c rumbs f r o m the plutoerat ie table.

I d a Crouch-Haz le t t .

th. t i .

R a t h d r u m , Ida., N o v . 9.

On Thur sday the prosecution under­

took to in t roduce the test imony of her

and M r s . A r c h i e P h i l l i p s that waa

g i v e n at the W a l l a c e t r i a l . The P h i l l i p s people were jumpers

f r o m the M a r b l e C r e e k d i s t r ic t who gave the most emphat ic evidence against A d a m s at the previous t r i a l . T h e y belonged to the c rowd of c l a i m jumpers who were banded together to depr ive the l a w f u l set t lers of t he i r r ights . P rosecu t ing A t t o r n e y K n i g h t made a f f i d a v i t that the state had t r i e d in every possible w a y to get these valuable witnesses to BS SfSBSal B u t they had le f t the j u r i s d i c t i o n of the state and gone out o f the country en­t i r e ly and cou ld not be found. M r . K n i g h t f u r t h e r a f f i r m e d that the P h i l ­l ips people had s ta ted that they had U-en so t e r r i f i ed by threats of violence, the a t tempted d y n a m i t i n g of the i r home and other outrages that they feared to g i v e a n y more tes t imony against the Fede ra t i on members. M r s . P h i l l i p s ' health was in a state of ner­vous collapse a n d P h i l l i p s had lost h i t job and could not get work, and since the b l o w i n g up of She r i f f B r o w n , he thought the best t h i n g he cou ld do f o r h imsel f was to get out of the coun­t ry .

H e y b u r n , the Demagogue.

A sensation w h i c h was a ve r i t ab l e explos ion o f . a p o l i t i c a l bomb i n the Idaho s i t u a t i n g , was caused by K n i g h t r ead ing a le t te r f rom Senator H e y b u r n r e l a t i ve to P h i l l i p s ' appoint­ment to a government job because of the service he had rendered the state by his t es t imony i n the Adams case.

It seems that the unders tanding was that P h i l l i p s was to be rewarded f o r his zeal in beha l f of the state in these

ises by an appo in tment to a govern­ment pos i t ion as t i m b e r cruiser upon

(Case* d ' .Ment i s Indian reserva-•in. C. .1. Shoemaker , t reasurer of

Koo tena i county , a po l i t i ca l go be-ween}, made a p p l i c a t i o n fo r P h i l l i p s o Senator H e y b u r n . Bu t H e y b u r n had

got wise H i s pa r ty is a f t e r the scalps f the o f f i c i a l s o f the Federa t ion , but

a n ' t get a l o n g wi thou t their votes. He knows the v o t i n g strength of the

•deration in Idaho. Hence i n spite f the se rv ice that c l a i m juti p> r P h i l -ipps has rendered the state author­

ities in t r y i n g to b r i n g about the con-ic t ion of A d a m s , H e y b u r n i t sudden-i' s t reek by g r i p p i n g pain* i n his

hi ther to e las t ic conscience and wr i t e s i Shoemaker that he has diseovt red

that P h i l l i p s was a H I M . p e r , and a iidgment was in court against h im oa

that charge, a m i h is appointment w;;« >ut of the ques t ion .

It leaked out that Shoemaker him stdf was •he man that wrote to the land

f f lce about P h i l l i p s , and thence i n ­formed H e y b u r n , o f the facts i n the

ase. H o w e v t r . H e y b u r n throw* P h i l ips overboard ra ther than go before

the Federa t ion voters wi th him as an incubus. A c c o r d i n g to the le t t s r presented by K n i g h t , Ph i l l i p s gets It back by c u t t i n g his job as i n f o r m e r , and the A d a m s prosecution is l e f t

ang l ing in the a i r metaphor ica l ly where it is the i r dear desire to have \da ins d a n g l i n g phys i ca l ly .

P i n k e r t o n i s h R u b b i s h . The melodramat ic phtute of b lood ,

thunder and br imatone . has the o ld P i n k e r t o n f lavor . Bu t the f r ame-up waa e f fec t ive .

V i o l a t e C o n s t i t u t i o n a l R i g h t . M r . Dar row made vigorous protcet

against any documenta ry evidvnee be-iug in t roduced agains t Adams where the de fendan t had no opor tun i ty to f a c e his answers. T h e judge sent the jury out a m i the case was argued. K n i g h t sa id the par t ies were beyt ud the j u r i s d i c t i o n of the court. H e had |aBSSi them to P o r t l a n d , and f r o m the best he could learn , they were now i n B r i t i s h C o l u m b i a .

M r . K n i g h t m a d " these statements u n d e r outh on the stand. Dar row asked him i f when ht> was in Spokane hun t ing the dynami t e , he *av» Th i e l e , the dect ive also. K n i g h t ad .n i t ' ed that he talket l to Thiele. M r . Har row then wanted to kuow i f h " had heard any­th ing about who hai l k i l l ed our wi t ness, H a r v e y B r o w n .

Judge M e H . I I made the argument on tin* competency of i l • witnesses. The I d a h o s ta tu te carries no provis­ion f o r east evidence. The r igh t ia u f undamen ta l one der ived f r o m M a g na i ' h a r t i that a man act used must be facet! by his accusers. T h e state has not this r igh t , but a defendant has. The I d a h o l aw is e x p l i c i t s n d

the utmost that ca: be done is to da-

(Coatiaued on Page t.)

i

Page 2: MONTANA NEWS (•list System . J^e •WNU AJra PIBI isur AY ... · MONTANA NEWS (•list System . J^e •WNU AJra PIBI isur.B AY THE SOCIALIST PAJKTY or NSMTANA •OL. TL HILENA MONTANA,

M O N T A N A N E W S . J e (•list System

• W N U AJra PIBI isur.B A Y T H E S O C I A L I S T P A J K T Y o r N S M T A N A

•OL. TL H I L E N A MONTANA, TH1TK8DAY, N O V E M B E R 14 1907. NO. 1

JURY SATISFACTORY TO A L L Rathdrum, Ida., Nov. 6.

Both tides seem to be well pleated

With the jury in the Adams rase. At­

torney Knight, leading counsel for the

prosecution, stated he was willing to

leave the outcome of the case in the

hands of the present jury.

Complexion of the Jury.

The jury and its occupation and poli-

Ratthdrum, Ida., Nov. 7. Mr. J . M Gentry and Mr. Edward

Htanttbury were two witnesses called by the state that have gone far to-wads strengthening Adams case in the trial now pending. These men were employed by the big timber companies in timber cruising. On one of these trips their party penetrated into the heavy, brushy woods, and there came upon the remains of a dead body lying

We a r c A p p o s e d t o g o v e r n m e n t by injunction. We arc opposed to any method o f Jurisprudence which makos a czar of a judge, al­low him to make arbitrary laws, and sentence men to jail for viola-don of his self made law. We are opposed to government by in­junction because it deprives a man of the right of a trial by a jury of his peers. We do oppose and will oppose any and all acts of court or king snbverslve of democratic institutions and destructive of alJ liberty.

'•• t ics are: M . B a r t o , Sucker U k c , g 0 | n e ^ l t , v t m a t h a t t h e y

rancher , and votes m i x e d t i c k e t ; Oeo.

P r i c e , 1'ost Ka i l s , m i l l h a n d , r epub l i can ;

C . A . Waters , Coeur d ' A l e n e s boat cap

t a i n , democrat W . G o r w o o d , L a k e

creek, f a rmer , democra t ; Char les Det-

temur l , Post F a l l s , merchant , demo­

c ra t ; H. A . V a r n u m , Qatar d ' A l e n e s ,

carpenter, r e p u b l i c a n ; J o h n ('. Cor ton ,

Ra thdrun i , f a rmer , democra t ; P . A . M c

A r t h u r , M i c a B a y . f a r m e r , republ ican ;

M i l t o n I ' iper , A t h o l , f a r m e r , democrat ;

M a t h c w M i l l e r , R a t h d r u m , farmer , |s>

mocra t ; J . T. H a r l a n , Host , f a rmer de­

mocra t ; H . F . House, R a t h d r u m , ranch­

er, democrat.

Va rnum was labor candidate for

mayor at Coeur d ' A l e n e s last sp r ing .

M i l l e r , D i t t emore a n d - H o r l a n have

been members of labor unions. N i n e

of the jurors have been homesteaders.

The state exerc ised a l l its peremp

tory r igh ts whi le the defense used on ly

seven peremptory chal lenges, pass ing

the panel twice E a c h t ime this p r iv ­

i lege is employed it exhausts a pcrem

tory , and when the j u r y was complete

the dt fense had but one lef t ia Mailt] Clarence H a r r o w , l e a d i n g , counsel

f o r the defense, entered objec t ion to

the state h a v i n g lit peremptory chal l ­

enges, s ay ing the l aw g i v i n g it

p r i v i l e g e was passed

Adams was t r i ed one.

facta, T h e abjaattaa

t h i s a f t e r Hteve

and was ex post was overruled,

it was made on the t h i r d peremptory chal lenge of the state last week and met w i t h the same f a t e . A n except ion was entered.

Tria l Begins.

Wednesday morn ing the first wi t

newses were ca l led by the prosecution.

M r s . Thomas , mother of Fred T y l e r ,

was first on the s tand, and related the

faeti about her f a m i l y coming out

f r o m M i c h i g a n f r o m the t imber tSM

t ry—herse l f and t w o daughters and

a f t e r wards F r e d S h e described the

apjearancc o f T y l e r and the t a k i n g up

of clams through a locator , one . lack

K u c r s t e i n .

H a r r o w ' s cross e x a m i n a t i o n brought

out that T y l e r w o r k e d i n the woods

i n M i c h i g a n that he had no money o f

his own but was f u r n i s h e d money to

bu i ld his cab in and get supplies, and

that Iks mother and sisters were to

be located, on c la ims i n the tame way . In several of T y l e r ' s let ters he had

w r i t t e n his nod her not to w o r r y about h im. When D a r r o w asked her what there was to w o r r y about, she said the w i l d an ima l s i n the woods where her son was go ing .

Harrow said , " A r c y o u sure M were not a f r a i d of the homesteaders instead of the c o n g o r s ! "

The evidence show that in a l l prob­a b i l i t y the T y l e r s Were s i m p l y a f a m i l y of jumpers b rought out f r o m the M i c h i g a n woodt b y B . R . L e w i s to take up lands f r o m the homesteaders f o r the b i g lumber cap i ta l i s t s .

B. R. L e w i s i t one of the vi les t c r im­ina ls that ever enr iched himself i n a new count ry by o v e r r i d i n g the r ights of the poor, t t e a l i n g and law break­i n g in order to ob ta in h i s r i c h e r H e

it a banker and wealthy lumber man

and hat made himself rich by hit

Crimea. In one of Tyler'a letters be taid it

waa part of the bargain that they were to get medicine from Kueratein, thr loeator.

Tyler's lister gave him a revolver to take with him on thit trip, show iug that he anticipated danger

l e f t i t there, and a f t e r w a r d s the T y l e r f a m i l y heard of i t , and went in and took possession o f i t . Deputy SlierifT W i l l i a m s was encountered acc iden ta l l y and taken in w i t h them. These s tor ies completely change the complex ion of the commonly accepted idea i n the

popular mind eoi r u i n g the case. It hat been genera l ly s ta ted that A d a m s was i n c r i m i n a t e d purely by his own

T W O confess ion, and the body of T y l e i f o u n d acco rd ing to his own di rec t ions . The test imony o f these witnesses ut­te r ly discredi t th i s v i ew. The body was f o u n d by accident , the iden t i f i cn t ion is very meager, and i f the stat< is depending u p o n the ha l f crazed con fess ion of a man tor tured by f e a r and a f t e r w a r d s comple te ly repudia ted by him, i ts chances arc p re t ty s l i m to head another Federa t ion man in to e te rn i ty that way .

Making an Example. The secret of the whole mat ter i a

tha t the b i g t imber companies want to make an example out of S t eve A d a m s so that i n the f u t u r e no ont w i l l in te r fe re w i t h thei r j umpers i n the interest of so unimpor tant a f a c t o r as homesteadert . They must get some one, and Steve as a f r i e n d of S i m p k i n s , whose c la im was among those that were pimped, is a convenicct charac ter to sacr i f ice .

A s the t r i a l progresses M r . H a w lev is s i t t i n g w i t h the s ta te ' s a t torneys wa tch ing what t ran spires, and m a k i n g f requent suggestions.

Not much interest is man i f e s t ed M I the t r i a l by the towu people. The general s y m p a t h y seems to bo w i t h Adams. The very fac t that these Inn her c ru i s ing par t ies went up to exam ine t imln-r a l ready set t led upon, show that the r igh t s of sett lers were ii»nor ed. T y l e r hai l had a cabin bu i l t f o r h im on the v e r y piece of land where S i m p k i n s ' c a b i n was a l ready bui l t and where he was l i v i n g

A n Unwilling Witness. The t e s t imony of George H . Root

one of the set t lers in the M a r b l e Creek d i s t r i c t , proved a r emarkab le corroborat ion of the in jus t i ce that is hea|Hi 'd upon the small proper ty owners by the great aggregat ions u f c ap i t a l Beet is a d a p i x T y o u n g f e l l o w that c l e rks in a Hardware store in Boise when he i t not on his c l a i m . H i s ev­ery act ion and word al lowed that he d i d not wish to t e s t i f y f o r that s ide of the case, and had been brought there against h is w i l l . H e is a person ul f r i e n d of S i m p k i n s , and was inter i s t e i l as a l l the settlers were, i n de­f e n d i n g their homes against the th ieves that were opera t ing under the protee t ion of the b i g lumber companies .

It seems that one Sunday the home­steaders met at an ind igna t ion meet­i n g in the woods, to d i s c u t i among themselves wha t should be done con­ce rn ing thei r homesteads and the Nor the rn P a c i f i c s t r ip w h i c h had jus t I H ' C I I opened.

A t th i s mee t ing A d a m s was pretent w i t h S i m p k i n s , and many others whose homes were menaced by the rapacious t imber th ieves . These men of the woods were a rmed ; as one wi tness sa id , " i t was unsafe to go unprotec ted in those d a y s . " D i f f e r e n t onet t a l k e d at t h i t mee t ing . The discuss ion was as regards wha t the settlert should do to protect their homes. The case of one c l a i m jumper was already in court, and a number advited that they pa t i e n t l y awa i t the issue in this case Others were for g e t t i n g the jumpers out of the coun t ry .

Asking Advice. K. i . . t testified to a conversa t ion he

had w i t h S i m p k i n s where in Simpkins asked his advice as to what he thought he ought to do w i t h the maa (Tver)

GOVERNMENT BY INJUNCTION EVIDENCE F A V O R A B L E TO A D A M S

L A T E S T FROM SCENE OF B A T T L E R a t h d r u m , N o v . l O .

M r . M i l l a r d , the uncle of S teve

A d a m s , is an in teres t ing figure at the

t r i a l . S t e v e was arrested on his ranch

at Ha ines . Oregon, a short d is tance

nit f r o m B a k e r C i t y . The k i n d heart

•d o ld gent leman is a fine specimen

of the o ld soldier , h a v i n g served

through the c i v i l wa r on the confeder­

als s ide. He is 71 years of age but

s t ra ight a m i vigorous w i t h ha i r a n d

in the office of ex-Governor M o r r i s o n

be fo re a number of witnesses.

Deep P l o t t e d Consp i racy .

Adams was held wi thout charge or

pre l iminary e x a m i n a t i o n un t i l a f t e r

his uncle got h im out on a wr i t o f

habeas corpus through ex Governor

M o r r i s o n whom he employed as at-

toi ney.

The day of the i r r i g a t i o n congress

Mr. M i l l a r d had asked to take d inner

beard yet da rk . H i s mind has Keen w i t h his nephew in the peni ten t ia ry ,

so ag i t a t ed by the shock ing Injus t ices T o his surprise W a r d e n W h i t n e y grant-

has perce ived in connect ion w i t h j ed the request, a n d he had a l ine din-

the arrest of his nephew that he has ner w i t h Steve and bis f a m i l y . T h i s

lost a l l f a i t h in any jus t i ce or rec t i - w a * the first t ime he had got to see

tude under th is government H e has h i m alone tdnce his arrest .

become en t i re ly devoted to the pro­gress of th i s case, and says he means to see it th rough no matter wha t i t costs. He says his w i f e is equal ly de­te rmined to stay w i t h the sad a n d t ragic s i t u a t i o n t i l t i ts f ina l issue.

A s an instance of the k i n d heart of the old gent leman he not only has real c,I eight e ih ldren o f his own but besides these has p rov ided and ca red f o r ten orphan ch i ld ren t i l l they were g r o w n . He raised Steve ami his two brothers , (although they w e n ' f a i r l y f a i r l y wel l g rown when their mother d ied .

Whi tney ca l l ed i n d u r i n g the v i s i t and made this s tatement , " I f Steve s tays wi th the state and helps hang these men ( r e f e r r i n g to the Wes te rn Federa l ion o f f i c i a l s ) he w i l l be given

• complete immun i ty . T o r t u r e Beg ins .

A f t e r this v i s i t , on a pretense of aearching Hteve f o r a n y t h i n g that his uncle sjlgfcl have g i v e n h im, he was s t r ipped, taken f r o m the woman ' s wa rd where he had been l i v i n g in com Iterative comfor t , and put in a mur Saver's eell The P i n k e r t o n scavengers were then admi t t ed to h im—the whole

Adams came f r o m P a r k C i t y , F t a h , '< g H J l , \ „ , harpies. H a w l e y , Good ing , M« to h is u n c l e ' s ranch in J u n e . He had P a r i a n . Th ie le and a l l the rest not be,, , in h i d i n g at a l l as the mine ' , 8 t e V ( . | , .„ | ,„.,.„ j-nled f , „ , \ . l y ! i

o w n e r s ' s ide of th is p ropos i t ion h a s j i n Colarado at the t ime of the indus spread broadcast . He was arrested ) r i a l , r ( , u l , l e s and was then turned out the next F e b r u a r y H e was h a u l i n g w i t h o u t a n y t r i a l or charge. The hay when S tounenberg was k i l l e d . H e . hardships he endured then seem to had located a ranch near Maker C i t y , have un rvasj M a W h e n he was re H i s t roubles and detent ion have ve ry a r r ( < t , „ | he was made to bel ieve that near ly caused h i m to loae i t , but h is : m . w , , u l d be mobbed i f taken back to uncle says he t h i n k s he can save i t c d o r a d o . f , , r u i l " When T h i e l e pretended to " l o - a t e

The mother sa id that K u e r s t e i n bai l who had bu i l t a house on his c l a i m i n f o r m e d Iter that l awyers had been Root adv ised to wait t i l l the c l a i m s retained to take .-barge of the contests

if there should bo any. Mr. Thomas, the stepfather of Tyler,

told hit tale of the events preceding Tyler's death, ami identified the clothes, hair and skull, which were ex­hibited.

Darrow went after him strenuously on this testimony, and asked him how he could identify the hair as Tyler's when he admits that he could not iden tify his Wife's or that of his sons. He attacked him on the shape of the tkull in the same way. He also brought out that no post mortem examination wat ever held, nor Was there ever a coroner's jury.

Ida Crouch-Hazlett.

were settled i n court. A t t o r n e y K n i g h t kept t r y i n g to

draw f r o m Root that Simpkins had said something violent at t h i t mee t ing but his closest ques t ion ing f a i l e d to oh. it a n y t h i n g of the k i n d . T h e pro s e d i t i o n t r i ed to draw out what the a l t e rna t ive w a s that they wan ted to do w i t h the set t lers . Root said, "to go to them and n o t i f y them that they wanted them to leave the c o u n t r y . '

S teve Logan was another se t t ler who waa at th is protest meet ing , that was summoned b y the state . H e p roved equal ly u n w i l l i n g to t e s t i f y f o r the prosecution, and was equa l ly e f l l c a c i oua to the cause of A d a m s .

Ida C r o u c h - H a z l e t t .

A f t e r O r c h a r d ' s " c o n f e s s i o n " a C a l d w e l l a t torney f i led the compla in t against A d a m s on wh ich he was arrest ed. De tec t ive T h i e l e went out and made the arrest and announced that he had " l o c a t e d ' ' A d a m s , whereas it had never been the sl ightest d i f f i c u l t y to " l o c a t e " h im. Instead of b e i n g t a k e n to the C a l d w e l l j a i l , he w a s •has s t ra ight through to Boise w i t h

his f a m i l y and lodged in the pen­itent i ray where he was kept f o r seven months wi thout b a i l , and wi thout a harge b e i n g lodged against h i m .

Closely Guarded. No one was a l lowed to see h im ex

ept the guards and the ar i s tocra ts of the Idaho repub l i can a d m i n i s t r a t i o n — leesUagi Bo rah , H a w l e y and a l l that

s w a r m of cap i t a l i s t parasi tes. Three imea his uncle t r i ed to see h i m , but ou ld never get to h im except in the

presence o f the guards. H i * m a i l was al l -.pen.'.I and read by the warden Hi> was shut off f r o m any c o m m u n i a t i o n w i t h the outs ide wor ld or any onf ideu tu i l re la t ions w i t h his f r i e n d s .

I m m e d i a t e l y a f t e r the ar res t of A d a m s , M r . M i l l a r d , who was i n Texas , wro to a f o r m e r f r i e n d of his, one M . S B o n d , , t o get C . A . M o o r e , a l a w y e r of B a k e r c i t y , and go to Boise and t r y and get b a i l f o r h i m . Moore and B o n d went to see G o o d i n g the first t h i n g when they a r r i v e d at Boise .

T h r o u g h some unexp la ined ove r s igh t A d a m s lay i n the p e n i t e n t i a r y a l o n g t i m e w i t h no a t t en t ion f r o m the F e d ­e ra t ion . It was then that G o o d i n g f u r n i s h e d the t r a i to r M o o r e w i t h mon ey to go to Colorado and see the gov crnor , and seo if he c o u l d not ob t a in i m m u n i t y f o r A d a m s , p r o v i d e d he w o u l d corrobora te O r c h a r d .

There can be no quest ion about skis l a t t e r instance as Moore admi t t ed this

h im, he phoned B r o w n , the sheriff at Bake r C i t y , who came out b r i n g i n g several others w i t h h i m . B r o w n sa id to Steve, " I am on the ins ide ; do what they want y o u to, a n d y o u ' l l be back* in a f e w d a y s . " A t M r . M i l l a r d ' I expense on the preced ing t r i a l B r o w n came to W a l l a c e a n d tes t i f ied to this for the defense. S o one can set- which side would have the incen t ive to b low him up, the P inke r to t i s or the defense

In regard to the P h i l l i p s ' y a r n about d y n a m i t e b e i n g f o u n d i n thei r vard in -Spokane , it is fishy wi th a P i n kerton flavor f r o m the start. I f the tale were genuine why litis no invest! ga l lon been made. It is hardly l i k e l y that T h i e l e ' s P i u k e r t o u s would over l o o k a bet l i k e that . Yet , no detei t u . s have been put to w o r k . A n why 10 pounds w i t h caps in a pa i l when one j io i i i id wou ld blow up the whole ne ighborhood f

Forcing the Confession. So f a r as the " c o n f e s s i o n " is con

eerned, S teve c o u l d n ' t have w r i t t e n i t i f he had t r i e d . He has no educat ion The human harpies f ixed i t up to aui t themselves, took S teve to a notary , and he signed i t . H e thought he was gone anyway and it made no di f ference wha t he d id .

Al though M r . M i l l a r d could not see his nephew alone, ho could see h i m i n the presence o f M o o r o , the man who had be t rayed h i m .

The rea l purpose o f th is whole s h a m e f u l pe r secu t ion is to get S teve to swear agains t the Co lo rada men, and t h i n support O r c h a r d ' i w o n d e r f u l revelat ion*, Vi the rwise unsupported.

The t r a i t o r M o o r e a d m i t i that f lood ing, Borah and H a w l e y pa id him a handsome fee.

C o n t i n u e d o n P a g e 4.)

MRS. H A Z L E T T ON TRIAL On F r i d a y , N o v e m b e r 15, M r s Hae-

l e U ' s t r i a l comos off in the super ior

court a t Spokane . The s t ruggle ahe

is m a k i n g agains t the unjust t y r anny

and i m p o s i t i o n of the cap i t a l i s t cour ts

is al l the han l e r as l o c a l Spokane ,

led by a number of w o u l d be pecudo

socialist*, has deserted to the enemy.

^ T h i s f r e e speech s t rugg le that the

state of Washington is w a g i n g w i t h

the authorities is of the utmost im­

portance to the future dissemination

uf the soeialist doctrine. Whatever

aid the f e l l o w worke r s of M r s . l iar ,

lot ciui b r i n g to the issue, w i l l neveT

be more needed. She is fighting th is

bat t le f o r us a l l , not in her own in te r

cat at a l l but aga ins t i t , and c e r t a in ly

no one but a c o w a r d w i l l leave ber

to bear the brunt o f the fight alone

If we cannot a l l be arrested and

go to j a i l f o r m a i n t a i n i n g the r ights

of a f r ee people, we can l o y a l l y s tand

by and suppor t those who do.

The report of the t r i a l w i l l be g i v e n

our next issue.

R a t h d r u m , Ida., N o v . 9. K v e r y t h i n g is encouraging f o r the

defendant i n the Steve A d a m s case so f a r . There is n o t h i n g that d i r ec t l y connects h im w i t h the cr ime of k i l l i n g F r e d T y l e r , and the indi rec t evidence is only such as might be adduced in any f r o n t i e r w a r f a r e ; where there are two f a c t i ons in a communi ty that hate each other, and especia l ly where there is so much at s take as a b i t t e r contest

f a rmer s and poor men who have se t t led on the l and under the provis­ions of the government , to make homes f o r themselves, and have a place on Sod's green ear th , and a bunch of

robber jumpers pa id by great cap i ta l ­i s t ic interests to break the law and de p r i v e the w o r k i n g class o f t he i r r ights .

Steve was w i t h his f r i e n d S i m p k i n s whose c l a i m had been jumped . B o t h were members of the Wes te rn F*>1

ra t ion and that was vnough to con­nect them w i t h murders and dvna mi te acco rd ing to that aveng ing angel

f the M i n e O w n e r s ' A s s o c i a t i o n , S leu th M c P a r l a n .

I t i s the op in ion o f those who have • II..wed the cha in of events closely

that not a hai r of S teve A d a m s ' head w i l l ever be touched. N o t o n l y is sll evidence l a c k i n g against h im but it is not be l i evab le that any j u r y o f poor hard w o r k i n g f a rmers in this count ry , as these man are, w i l l ever b r i n g in any verd ic t anywhere in f a v o r of the t imber robbers and against honest sett lers.

F a i r T r i a l . The court proceedings arc b e i n g con

lucted i l l as f a i r a manner ; is could be expecte I under a system of laws ami ins t i tu t ions based upon the monu mental c r ime o f the despol ia t ion of he w o r k i n g class ami the robbery and

murder of the highest hopes and op­por tun i t i e s of the human race.

l o d g e Woons is a very k i n d , pleas­ant man, and his ru l ings are g i v i n g the defendant the extreme la t i tude that the l aw a l lows h i m . N o one can compla in of his lack of < turtesy to the a t torneys f o r the defense. In fact he has sa id that Har row was the strongest man he ever saw at the bar.

V e r y l i t t l e interest is man i fes t ed in the case by the townspeople of Rath d rum, even the t i ny cour t room be ing filled on ly a por t ion o f the t ime .

Steve is be ing t reated as w e l l as could be expected under the e i rcum stances. The sher i f f has re laxed the

lose confinement in which he was held at first . It was h a v i n g a v e r y bad effect on the eyes o f Adams, and tin a l ly the doctor sa id he would go b l i n d unless he was g i v e n outdoor exercise, and now every day he may be seen •ut w i t h S h e r i f f Mat-Donald or a bai

l i f f t a k i n g a w a l k ab tut t own . He bj a lways v e r y nea t ly dressed, ani l as one meets the two men there is no th ing to ind ica te that a desperate Federa t ion murderi r is w a l k i n g loose around lasva.

C o r r u p t i n g C a p i t a l i s t P ress . The cap i t a l i s t papers are d o i n g ex

ac t ly as they d id in southern Idaho using eve ry s in i s te r and v i c i o u s means to misrepresent the fac t s , m a l i g n tin Fede ra t i on , and pre jud ice the minds of the pub l ic against the Federa t ion men th rough the avenues of th i s case E v e r y absurd and on the face of i t f a k e tale is t ro t ted out i n sober earn est as re l i ab le ma te r i a l . T h e F e d era t ion men are branded as c r i m i n a l s i n every l ine of i t s p ros t i tu ted m ports. It is even r i v a l i n g the States man in i t s unp r inc ip l ed tight against these w o r k i n g men and is m a k i n g it se l f so obnoxious to the w o r k i n g class and in f a c t a l l f a i r minded people throughout the Ra thd rum cominun u v that i t s c i r c u l a t i o n has f a l l e n off per cept bly . In f ac t a movement i t on foo t to boycot t i t comple te ly through out th is d i s t n . t . Its reporter , S t a t i c has aroused a great deal of an tagonism and d i s l i k e not only by the u t t e r ly false reports he is p r i n t i n g but by his unpopular and b u l l d o z i n g ways . It i t even s ta ted that he is one of the

ratt iest P i n k e r t o n s and spies em ployed against the Federa l i on . O f bru ta l and s tocky phys ica l demeanor he is most i n s u l t i n g to the social is ts about t own , even us ing v io lence am of fens ive language. So unpopular is he that there is l i ab le to be trouble over his presence at the t r i a l as th rep iese i i ta t ive of the Rev iew.

The R a t h d r u m T r i b i makes feeble echo o f i t l pace setter, the Re view, a i m i n g to pre judice and poison the minds of the ] pie through i ts u n t r u t h f u l report! . It stated that tin Spokesman reporter went on the stand and re i te ra ted that M r s . H a z l c t t ha stated to h i m that she was go iug to Ra thdurm to educate the A d a m s ju ry a de l ibera te fa l sehood as the reporter had den ied express ly that she sai that, the s ta tement be ing in the head lines w h i c h he admi t t ed j » e r e w r i t t e n by another party. B u t what is a l i t t l e one horse cap i t a l i s t sheet f o r that is

s t a rv ing on the ragged edge of syco­phancy i f i t is not to l i cksp i t t l e to i t l cap i ta l i s t bosses that feed i t on the p o l i t i c a l c rumbs f r o m the plutoerat ie table.

I d a Crouch-Haz le t t .

th. t i .

R a t h d r u m , Ida., N o v . 9.

On Thur sday the prosecution under­

took to in t roduce the test imony of her

and M r s . A r c h i e P h i l l i p s that waa

g i v e n at the W a l l a c e t r i a l . The P h i l l i p s people were jumpers

f r o m the M a r b l e C r e e k d i s t r ic t who gave the most emphat ic evidence against A d a m s at the previous t r i a l . T h e y belonged to the c rowd of c l a i m jumpers who were banded together to depr ive the l a w f u l set t lers of t he i r r ights . P rosecu t ing A t t o r n e y K n i g h t made a f f i d a v i t that the state had t r i e d in every possible w a y to get these valuable witnesses to BS SfSBSal B u t they had le f t the j u r i s d i c t i o n of the state and gone out o f the country en­t i r e ly and cou ld not be found. M r . K n i g h t f u r t h e r a f f i r m e d that the P h i l ­l ips people had s ta ted that they had U-en so t e r r i f i ed by threats of violence, the a t tempted d y n a m i t i n g of the i r home and other outrages that they feared to g i v e a n y more tes t imony against the Fede ra t i on members. M r s . P h i l l i p s ' health was in a state of ner­vous collapse a n d P h i l l i p s had lost h i t job and could not get work, and since the b l o w i n g up of She r i f f B r o w n , he thought the best t h i n g he cou ld do f o r h imsel f was to get out of the coun­t ry .

H e y b u r n , the Demagogue.

A sensation w h i c h was a ve r i t ab l e explos ion o f . a p o l i t i c a l bomb i n the Idaho s i t u a t i n g , was caused by K n i g h t r ead ing a le t te r f rom Senator H e y b u r n r e l a t i ve to P h i l l i p s ' appoint­ment to a government job because of the service he had rendered the state by his t es t imony i n the Adams case.

It seems that the unders tanding was that P h i l l i p s was to be rewarded f o r his zeal in beha l f of the state in these

ises by an appo in tment to a govern­ment pos i t ion as t i m b e r cruiser upon

(Case* d ' .Ment i s Indian reserva-•in. C. .1. Shoemaker , t reasurer of

Koo tena i county , a po l i t i ca l go be-ween}, made a p p l i c a t i o n fo r P h i l l i p s o Senator H e y b u r n . Bu t H e y b u r n had

got wise H i s pa r ty is a f t e r the scalps f the o f f i c i a l s o f the Federa t ion , but

a n ' t get a l o n g wi thou t their votes. He knows the v o t i n g strength of the

•deration in Idaho. Hence i n spite f the se rv ice that c l a i m juti p> r P h i l -ipps has rendered the state author­

ities in t r y i n g to b r i n g about the con-ic t ion of A d a m s , H e y b u r n i t sudden-i' s t reek by g r i p p i n g pain* i n his

hi ther to e las t ic conscience and wr i t e s i Shoemaker that he has diseovt red

that P h i l l i p s was a H I M . p e r , and a iidgment was in court against h im oa

that charge, a m i h is appointment w;;« >ut of the ques t ion .

It leaked out that Shoemaker him stdf was •he man that wrote to the land

f f lce about P h i l l i p s , and thence i n ­formed H e y b u r n , o f the facts i n the

ase. H o w e v t r . H e y b u r n throw* P h i l ips overboard ra ther than go before

the Federa t ion voters wi th him as an incubus. A c c o r d i n g to the le t t s r presented by K n i g h t , Ph i l l i p s gets It back by c u t t i n g his job as i n f o r m e r , and the A d a m s prosecution is l e f t

ang l ing in the a i r metaphor ica l ly where it is the i r dear desire to have \da ins d a n g l i n g phys i ca l ly .

P i n k e r t o n i s h R u b b i s h . The melodramat ic phtute of b lood ,

thunder and br imatone . has the o ld P i n k e r t o n f lavor . Bu t the f r ame-up waa e f fec t ive .

V i o l a t e C o n s t i t u t i o n a l R i g h t . M r . Dar row made vigorous protcet

against any documenta ry evidvnee be-iug in t roduced agains t Adams where the de fendan t had no opor tun i ty to f a c e his answers. T h e judge sent the jury out a m i the case was argued. K n i g h t sa id the par t ies were beyt ud the j u r i s d i c t i o n of the court. H e had |aBSSi them to P o r t l a n d , and f r o m the best he could learn , they were now i n B r i t i s h C o l u m b i a .

M r . K n i g h t m a d " these statements u n d e r outh on the stand. Dar row asked him i f when ht> was in Spokane hun t ing the dynami t e , he *av» Th i e l e , the dect ive also. K n i g h t ad .n i t ' ed that he talket l to Thiele. M r . Har row then wanted to kuow i f h " had heard any­th ing about who hai l k i l l ed our wi t ness, H a r v e y B r o w n .

Judge M e H . I I made the argument on tin* competency of i l • witnesses. The I d a h o s ta tu te carries no provis­ion f o r east evidence. The r igh t ia u f undamen ta l one der ived f r o m M a g na i ' h a r t i that a man act used must be facet! by his accusers. T h e state has not this r igh t , but a defendant has. The I d a h o l aw is e x p l i c i t s n d

the utmost that ca: be done is to da-

(Coatiaued on Page t.)

i

Page 3: MONTANA NEWS (•list System . J^e •WNU AJra PIBI isur AY ... · MONTANA NEWS (•list System . J^e •WNU AJra PIBI isur.B AY THE SOCIALIST PAJKTY or NSMTANA •OL. TL HILENA MONTANA,

M O N T A N A N E W S . J e (•list System

• W N U AJra PIBI isur.B A Y T H E S O C I A L I S T P A J K T Y o r N S M T A N A

•OL. TL H I L E N A MONTANA, TH1TK8DAY, N O V E M B E R 14 1907. NO. 1

JURY SATISFACTORY TO A L L Rathdrum, Ida., Nov. 6.

Both tides seem to be well pleated

With the jury in the Adams rase. At­

torney Knight, leading counsel for the

prosecution, stated he was willing to

leave the outcome of the case in the

hands of the present jury.

Complexion of the Jury.

The jury and its occupation and poli-

Ratthdrum, Ida., Nov. 7. Mr. J . M Gentry and Mr. Edward

Htanttbury were two witnesses called by the state that have gone far to-wads strengthening Adams case in the trial now pending. These men were employed by the big timber companies in timber cruising. On one of these trips their party penetrated into the heavy, brushy woods, and there came upon the remains of a dead body lying

We a r c A p p o s e d t o g o v e r n m e n t by injunction. We arc opposed to any method o f Jurisprudence which makos a czar of a judge, al­low him to make arbitrary laws, and sentence men to jail for viola-don of his self made law. We are opposed to government by in­junction because it deprives a man of the right of a trial by a jury of his peers. We do oppose and will oppose any and all acts of court or king snbverslve of democratic institutions and destructive of alJ liberty.

'•• t ics are: M . B a r t o , Sucker U k c , g 0 | n e ^ l t , v t m a t h a t t h e y

rancher , and votes m i x e d t i c k e t ; Oeo.

P r i c e , 1'ost Ka i l s , m i l l h a n d , r epub l i can ;

C . A . Waters , Coeur d ' A l e n e s boat cap

t a i n , democrat W . G o r w o o d , L a k e

creek, f a rmer , democra t ; Char les Det-

temur l , Post F a l l s , merchant , demo­

c ra t ; H. A . V a r n u m , Qatar d ' A l e n e s ,

carpenter, r e p u b l i c a n ; J o h n ('. Cor ton ,

Ra thdrun i , f a rmer , democra t ; P . A . M c

A r t h u r , M i c a B a y . f a r m e r , republ ican ;

M i l t o n I ' iper , A t h o l , f a r m e r , democrat ;

M a t h c w M i l l e r , R a t h d r u m , farmer , |s>

mocra t ; J . T. H a r l a n , Host , f a rmer de­

mocra t ; H . F . House, R a t h d r u m , ranch­

er, democrat.

Va rnum was labor candidate for

mayor at Coeur d ' A l e n e s last sp r ing .

M i l l e r , D i t t emore a n d - H o r l a n have

been members of labor unions. N i n e

of the jurors have been homesteaders.

The state exerc ised a l l its peremp

tory r igh ts whi le the defense used on ly

seven peremptory chal lenges, pass ing

the panel twice E a c h t ime this p r iv ­

i lege is employed it exhausts a pcrem

tory , and when the j u r y was complete

the dt fense had but one lef t ia Mailt] Clarence H a r r o w , l e a d i n g , counsel

f o r the defense, entered objec t ion to

the state h a v i n g lit peremptory chal l ­

enges, s ay ing the l aw g i v i n g it

p r i v i l e g e was passed

Adams was t r i ed one.

facta, T h e abjaattaa

t h i s a f t e r Hteve

and was ex post was overruled,

it was made on the t h i r d peremptory chal lenge of the state last week and met w i t h the same f a t e . A n except ion was entered.

Tria l Begins.

Wednesday morn ing the first wi t

newses were ca l led by the prosecution.

M r s . Thomas , mother of Fred T y l e r ,

was first on the s tand, and related the

faeti about her f a m i l y coming out

f r o m M i c h i g a n f r o m the t imber tSM

t ry—herse l f and t w o daughters and

a f t e r wards F r e d S h e described the

apjearancc o f T y l e r and the t a k i n g up

of clams through a locator , one . lack

K u c r s t e i n .

H a r r o w ' s cross e x a m i n a t i o n brought

out that T y l e r w o r k e d i n the woods

i n M i c h i g a n that he had no money o f

his own but was f u r n i s h e d money to

bu i ld his cab in and get supplies, and

that Iks mother and sisters were to

be located, on c la ims i n the tame way . In several of T y l e r ' s let ters he had

w r i t t e n his nod her not to w o r r y about h im. When D a r r o w asked her what there was to w o r r y about, she said the w i l d an ima l s i n the woods where her son was go ing .

Harrow said , " A r c y o u sure M were not a f r a i d of the homesteaders instead of the c o n g o r s ! "

The evidence show that in a l l prob­a b i l i t y the T y l e r s Were s i m p l y a f a m i l y of jumpers b rought out f r o m the M i c h i g a n woodt b y B . R . L e w i s to take up lands f r o m the homesteaders f o r the b i g lumber cap i ta l i s t s .

B. R. L e w i s i t one of the vi les t c r im­ina ls that ever enr iched himself i n a new count ry by o v e r r i d i n g the r ights of the poor, t t e a l i n g and law break­i n g in order to ob ta in h i s r i c h e r H e

it a banker and wealthy lumber man

and hat made himself rich by hit

Crimea. In one of Tyler'a letters be taid it

waa part of the bargain that they were to get medicine from Kueratein, thr loeator.

Tyler's lister gave him a revolver to take with him on thit trip, show iug that he anticipated danger

l e f t i t there, and a f t e r w a r d s the T y l e r f a m i l y heard of i t , and went in and took possession o f i t . Deputy SlierifT W i l l i a m s was encountered acc iden ta l l y and taken in w i t h them. These s tor ies completely change the complex ion of the commonly accepted idea i n the

popular mind eoi r u i n g the case. It hat been genera l ly s ta ted that A d a m s was i n c r i m i n a t e d purely by his own

T W O confess ion, and the body of T y l e i f o u n d acco rd ing to his own di rec t ions . The test imony o f these witnesses ut­te r ly discredi t th i s v i ew. The body was f o u n d by accident , the iden t i f i cn t ion is very meager, and i f the stat< is depending u p o n the ha l f crazed con fess ion of a man tor tured by f e a r and a f t e r w a r d s comple te ly repudia ted by him, i ts chances arc p re t ty s l i m to head another Federa t ion man in to e te rn i ty that way .

Making an Example. The secret of the whole mat ter i a

tha t the b i g t imber companies want to make an example out of S t eve A d a m s so that i n the f u t u r e no ont w i l l in te r fe re w i t h thei r j umpers i n the interest of so unimpor tant a f a c t o r as homesteadert . They must get some one, and Steve as a f r i e n d of S i m p k i n s , whose c la im was among those that were pimped, is a convenicct charac ter to sacr i f ice .

A s the t r i a l progresses M r . H a w lev is s i t t i n g w i t h the s ta te ' s a t torneys wa tch ing what t ran spires, and m a k i n g f requent suggestions.

Not much interest is man i f e s t ed M I the t r i a l by the towu people. The general s y m p a t h y seems to bo w i t h Adams. The very fac t that these Inn her c ru i s ing par t ies went up to exam ine t imln-r a l ready set t led upon, show that the r igh t s of sett lers were ii»nor ed. T y l e r hai l had a cabin bu i l t f o r h im on the v e r y piece of land where S i m p k i n s ' c a b i n was a l ready bui l t and where he was l i v i n g

A n Unwilling Witness. The t e s t imony of George H . Root

one of the set t lers in the M a r b l e Creek d i s t r i c t , proved a r emarkab le corroborat ion of the in jus t i ce that is hea|Hi 'd upon the small proper ty owners by the great aggregat ions u f c ap i t a l Beet is a d a p i x T y o u n g f e l l o w that c l e rks in a Hardware store in Boise when he i t not on his c l a i m . H i s ev­ery act ion and word al lowed that he d i d not wish to t e s t i f y f o r that s ide of the case, and had been brought there against h is w i l l . H e is a person ul f r i e n d of S i m p k i n s , and was inter i s t e i l as a l l the settlers were, i n de­f e n d i n g their homes against the th ieves that were opera t ing under the protee t ion of the b i g lumber companies .

It seems that one Sunday the home­steaders met at an ind igna t ion meet­i n g in the woods, to d i s c u t i among themselves wha t should be done con­ce rn ing thei r homesteads and the Nor the rn P a c i f i c s t r ip w h i c h had jus t I H ' C I I opened.

A t th i s mee t ing A d a m s was pretent w i t h S i m p k i n s , and many others whose homes were menaced by the rapacious t imber th ieves . These men of the woods were a rmed ; as one wi tness sa id , " i t was unsafe to go unprotec ted in those d a y s . " D i f f e r e n t onet t a l k e d at t h i t mee t ing . The discuss ion was as regards wha t the settlert should do to protect their homes. The case of one c l a i m jumper was already in court, and a number advited that they pa t i e n t l y awa i t the issue in this case Others were for g e t t i n g the jumpers out of the coun t ry .

Asking Advice. K. i . . t testified to a conversa t ion he

had w i t h S i m p k i n s where in Simpkins asked his advice as to what he thought he ought to do w i t h the maa (Tver)

GOVERNMENT BY INJUNCTION EVIDENCE F A V O R A B L E TO A D A M S

L A T E S T FROM SCENE OF B A T T L E R a t h d r u m , N o v . l O .

M r . M i l l a r d , the uncle of S teve

A d a m s , is an in teres t ing figure at the

t r i a l . S t e v e was arrested on his ranch

at Ha ines . Oregon, a short d is tance

nit f r o m B a k e r C i t y . The k i n d heart

•d o ld gent leman is a fine specimen

of the o ld soldier , h a v i n g served

through the c i v i l wa r on the confeder­

als s ide. He is 71 years of age but

s t ra ight a m i vigorous w i t h ha i r a n d

in the office of ex-Governor M o r r i s o n

be fo re a number of witnesses.

Deep P l o t t e d Consp i racy .

Adams was held wi thout charge or

pre l iminary e x a m i n a t i o n un t i l a f t e r

his uncle got h im out on a wr i t o f

habeas corpus through ex Governor

M o r r i s o n whom he employed as at-

toi ney.

The day of the i r r i g a t i o n congress

Mr. M i l l a r d had asked to take d inner

beard yet da rk . H i s mind has Keen w i t h his nephew in the peni ten t ia ry ,

so ag i t a t ed by the shock ing Injus t ices T o his surprise W a r d e n W h i t n e y grant-

has perce ived in connect ion w i t h j ed the request, a n d he had a l ine din-

the arrest of his nephew that he has ner w i t h Steve and bis f a m i l y . T h i s

lost a l l f a i t h in any jus t i ce or rec t i - w a * the first t ime he had got to see

tude under th is government H e has h i m alone tdnce his arrest .

become en t i re ly devoted to the pro­gress of th i s case, and says he means to see it th rough no matter wha t i t costs. He says his w i f e is equal ly de­te rmined to stay w i t h the sad a n d t ragic s i t u a t i o n t i l t i ts f ina l issue.

A s an instance of the k i n d heart of the old gent leman he not only has real c,I eight e ih ldren o f his own but besides these has p rov ided and ca red f o r ten orphan ch i ld ren t i l l they were g r o w n . He raised Steve ami his two brothers , (although they w e n ' f a i r l y f a i r l y wel l g rown when their mother d ied .

Whi tney ca l l ed i n d u r i n g the v i s i t and made this s tatement , " I f Steve s tays wi th the state and helps hang these men ( r e f e r r i n g to the Wes te rn Federa l ion o f f i c i a l s ) he w i l l be given

• complete immun i ty . T o r t u r e Beg ins .

A f t e r this v i s i t , on a pretense of aearching Hteve f o r a n y t h i n g that his uncle sjlgfcl have g i v e n h im, he was s t r ipped, taken f r o m the woman ' s wa rd where he had been l i v i n g in com Iterative comfor t , and put in a mur Saver's eell The P i n k e r t o n scavengers were then admi t t ed to h im—the whole

Adams came f r o m P a r k C i t y , F t a h , '< g H J l , \ „ , harpies. H a w l e y , Good ing , M« to h is u n c l e ' s ranch in J u n e . He had P a r i a n . Th ie le and a l l the rest not be,, , in h i d i n g at a l l as the mine ' , 8 t e V ( . | , .„ | ,„.,.„ j-nled f , „ , \ . l y ! i

o w n e r s ' s ide of th is p ropos i t ion h a s j i n Colarado at the t ime of the indus spread broadcast . He was arrested ) r i a l , r ( , u l , l e s and was then turned out the next F e b r u a r y H e was h a u l i n g w i t h o u t a n y t r i a l or charge. The hay when S tounenberg was k i l l e d . H e . hardships he endured then seem to had located a ranch near Maker C i t y , have un rvasj M a W h e n he was re H i s t roubles and detent ion have ve ry a r r ( < t , „ | he was made to bel ieve that near ly caused h i m to loae i t , but h is : m . w , , u l d be mobbed i f taken back to uncle says he t h i n k s he can save i t c d o r a d o . f , , r u i l " When T h i e l e pretended to " l o - a t e

The mother sa id that K u e r s t e i n bai l who had bu i l t a house on his c l a i m i n f o r m e d Iter that l awyers had been Root adv ised to wait t i l l the c l a i m s retained to take .-barge of the contests

if there should bo any. Mr. Thomas, the stepfather of Tyler,

told hit tale of the events preceding Tyler's death, ami identified the clothes, hair and skull, which were ex­hibited.

Darrow went after him strenuously on this testimony, and asked him how he could identify the hair as Tyler's when he admits that he could not iden tify his Wife's or that of his sons. He attacked him on the shape of the tkull in the same way. He also brought out that no post mortem examination wat ever held, nor Was there ever a coroner's jury.

Ida Crouch-Hazlett.

were settled i n court. A t t o r n e y K n i g h t kept t r y i n g to

draw f r o m Root that Simpkins had said something violent at t h i t mee t ing but his closest ques t ion ing f a i l e d to oh. it a n y t h i n g of the k i n d . T h e pro s e d i t i o n t r i ed to draw out what the a l t e rna t ive w a s that they wan ted to do w i t h the set t lers . Root said, "to go to them and n o t i f y them that they wanted them to leave the c o u n t r y . '

S teve Logan was another se t t ler who waa at th is protest meet ing , that was summoned b y the state . H e p roved equal ly u n w i l l i n g to t e s t i f y f o r the prosecution, and was equa l ly e f l l c a c i oua to the cause of A d a m s .

Ida C r o u c h - H a z l e t t .

A f t e r O r c h a r d ' s " c o n f e s s i o n " a C a l d w e l l a t torney f i led the compla in t against A d a m s on wh ich he was arrest ed. De tec t ive T h i e l e went out and made the arrest and announced that he had " l o c a t e d ' ' A d a m s , whereas it had never been the sl ightest d i f f i c u l t y to " l o c a t e " h im. Instead of b e i n g t a k e n to the C a l d w e l l j a i l , he w a s •has s t ra ight through to Boise w i t h

his f a m i l y and lodged in the pen­itent i ray where he was kept f o r seven months wi thout b a i l , and wi thout a harge b e i n g lodged against h i m .

Closely Guarded. No one was a l lowed to see h im ex

ept the guards and the ar i s tocra ts of the Idaho repub l i can a d m i n i s t r a t i o n — leesUagi Bo rah , H a w l e y and a l l that

s w a r m of cap i t a l i s t parasi tes. Three imea his uncle t r i ed to see h i m , but ou ld never get to h im except in the

presence o f the guards. H i * m a i l was al l -.pen.'.I and read by the warden Hi> was shut off f r o m any c o m m u n i a t i o n w i t h the outs ide wor ld or any onf ideu tu i l re la t ions w i t h his f r i e n d s .

I m m e d i a t e l y a f t e r the ar res t of A d a m s , M r . M i l l a r d , who was i n Texas , wro to a f o r m e r f r i e n d of his, one M . S B o n d , , t o get C . A . M o o r e , a l a w y e r of B a k e r c i t y , and go to Boise and t r y and get b a i l f o r h i m . Moore and B o n d went to see G o o d i n g the first t h i n g when they a r r i v e d at Boise .

T h r o u g h some unexp la ined ove r s igh t A d a m s lay i n the p e n i t e n t i a r y a l o n g t i m e w i t h no a t t en t ion f r o m the F e d ­e ra t ion . It was then that G o o d i n g f u r n i s h e d the t r a i to r M o o r e w i t h mon ey to go to Colorado and see the gov crnor , and seo if he c o u l d not ob t a in i m m u n i t y f o r A d a m s , p r o v i d e d he w o u l d corrobora te O r c h a r d .

There can be no quest ion about skis l a t t e r instance as Moore admi t t ed this

h im, he phoned B r o w n , the sheriff at Bake r C i t y , who came out b r i n g i n g several others w i t h h i m . B r o w n sa id to Steve, " I am on the ins ide ; do what they want y o u to, a n d y o u ' l l be back* in a f e w d a y s . " A t M r . M i l l a r d ' I expense on the preced ing t r i a l B r o w n came to W a l l a c e a n d tes t i f ied to this for the defense. S o one can set- which side would have the incen t ive to b low him up, the P inke r to t i s or the defense

In regard to the P h i l l i p s ' y a r n about d y n a m i t e b e i n g f o u n d i n thei r vard in -Spokane , it is fishy wi th a P i n kerton flavor f r o m the start. I f the tale were genuine why litis no invest! ga l lon been made. It is hardly l i k e l y that T h i e l e ' s P i u k e r t o u s would over l o o k a bet l i k e that . Yet , no detei t u . s have been put to w o r k . A n why 10 pounds w i t h caps in a pa i l when one j io i i i id wou ld blow up the whole ne ighborhood f

Forcing the Confession. So f a r as the " c o n f e s s i o n " is con

eerned, S teve c o u l d n ' t have w r i t t e n i t i f he had t r i e d . He has no educat ion The human harpies f ixed i t up to aui t themselves, took S teve to a notary , and he signed i t . H e thought he was gone anyway and it made no di f ference wha t he d id .

Al though M r . M i l l a r d could not see his nephew alone, ho could see h i m i n the presence o f M o o r o , the man who had be t rayed h i m .

The rea l purpose o f th is whole s h a m e f u l pe r secu t ion is to get S teve to swear agains t the Co lo rada men, and t h i n support O r c h a r d ' i w o n d e r f u l revelat ion*, Vi the rwise unsupported.

The t r a i t o r M o o r e a d m i t i that f lood ing, Borah and H a w l e y pa id him a handsome fee.

C o n t i n u e d o n P a g e 4.)

MRS. H A Z L E T T ON TRIAL On F r i d a y , N o v e m b e r 15, M r s Hae-

l e U ' s t r i a l comos off in the super ior

court a t Spokane . The s t ruggle ahe

is m a k i n g agains t the unjust t y r anny

and i m p o s i t i o n of the cap i t a l i s t cour ts

is al l the han l e r as l o c a l Spokane ,

led by a number of w o u l d be pecudo

socialist*, has deserted to the enemy.

^ T h i s f r e e speech s t rugg le that the

state of Washington is w a g i n g w i t h

the authorities is of the utmost im­

portance to the future dissemination

uf the soeialist doctrine. Whatever

aid the f e l l o w worke r s of M r s . l iar ,

lot ciui b r i n g to the issue, w i l l neveT

be more needed. She is fighting th is

bat t le f o r us a l l , not in her own in te r

cat at a l l but aga ins t i t , and c e r t a in ly

no one but a c o w a r d w i l l leave ber

to bear the brunt o f the fight alone

If we cannot a l l be arrested and

go to j a i l f o r m a i n t a i n i n g the r ights

of a f r ee people, we can l o y a l l y s tand

by and suppor t those who do.

The report of the t r i a l w i l l be g i v e n

our next issue.

R a t h d r u m , Ida., N o v . 9. K v e r y t h i n g is encouraging f o r the

defendant i n the Steve A d a m s case so f a r . There is n o t h i n g that d i r ec t l y connects h im w i t h the cr ime of k i l l i n g F r e d T y l e r , and the indi rec t evidence is only such as might be adduced in any f r o n t i e r w a r f a r e ; where there are two f a c t i ons in a communi ty that hate each other, and especia l ly where there is so much at s take as a b i t t e r contest

f a rmer s and poor men who have se t t led on the l and under the provis­ions of the government , to make homes f o r themselves, and have a place on Sod's green ear th , and a bunch of

robber jumpers pa id by great cap i ta l ­i s t ic interests to break the law and de p r i v e the w o r k i n g class o f t he i r r ights .

Steve was w i t h his f r i e n d S i m p k i n s whose c l a i m had been jumped . B o t h were members of the Wes te rn F*>1

ra t ion and that was vnough to con­nect them w i t h murders and dvna mi te acco rd ing to that aveng ing angel

f the M i n e O w n e r s ' A s s o c i a t i o n , S leu th M c P a r l a n .

I t i s the op in ion o f those who have • II..wed the cha in of events closely

that not a hai r of S teve A d a m s ' head w i l l ever be touched. N o t o n l y is sll evidence l a c k i n g against h im but it is not be l i evab le that any j u r y o f poor hard w o r k i n g f a rmers in this count ry , as these man are, w i l l ever b r i n g in any verd ic t anywhere in f a v o r of the t imber robbers and against honest sett lers.

F a i r T r i a l . The court proceedings arc b e i n g con

lucted i l l as f a i r a manner ; is could be expecte I under a system of laws ami ins t i tu t ions based upon the monu mental c r ime o f the despol ia t ion of he w o r k i n g class ami the robbery and

murder of the highest hopes and op­por tun i t i e s of the human race.

l o d g e Woons is a very k i n d , pleas­ant man, and his ru l ings are g i v i n g the defendant the extreme la t i tude that the l aw a l lows h i m . N o one can compla in of his lack of < turtesy to the a t torneys f o r the defense. In fact he has sa id that Har row was the strongest man he ever saw at the bar.

V e r y l i t t l e interest is man i fes t ed in the case by the townspeople of Rath d rum, even the t i ny cour t room be ing filled on ly a por t ion o f the t ime .

Steve is be ing t reated as w e l l as could be expected under the e i rcum stances. The sher i f f has re laxed the

lose confinement in which he was held at first . It was h a v i n g a v e r y bad effect on the eyes o f Adams, and tin a l ly the doctor sa id he would go b l i n d unless he was g i v e n outdoor exercise, and now every day he may be seen •ut w i t h S h e r i f f Mat-Donald or a bai

l i f f t a k i n g a w a l k ab tut t own . He bj a lways v e r y nea t ly dressed, ani l as one meets the two men there is no th ing to ind ica te that a desperate Federa t ion murderi r is w a l k i n g loose around lasva.

C o r r u p t i n g C a p i t a l i s t P ress . The cap i t a l i s t papers are d o i n g ex

ac t ly as they d id in southern Idaho using eve ry s in i s te r and v i c i o u s means to misrepresent the fac t s , m a l i g n tin Fede ra t i on , and pre jud ice the minds of the pub l ic against the Federa t ion men th rough the avenues of th i s case E v e r y absurd and on the face of i t f a k e tale is t ro t ted out i n sober earn est as re l i ab le ma te r i a l . T h e F e d era t ion men are branded as c r i m i n a l s i n every l ine of i t s p ros t i tu ted m ports. It is even r i v a l i n g the States man in i t s unp r inc ip l ed tight against these w o r k i n g men and is m a k i n g it se l f so obnoxious to the w o r k i n g class and in f a c t a l l f a i r minded people throughout the Ra thd rum cominun u v that i t s c i r c u l a t i o n has f a l l e n off per cept bly . In f ac t a movement i t on foo t to boycot t i t comple te ly through out th is d i s t n . t . Its reporter , S t a t i c has aroused a great deal of an tagonism and d i s l i k e not only by the u t t e r ly false reports he is p r i n t i n g but by his unpopular and b u l l d o z i n g ways . It i t even s ta ted that he is one of the

ratt iest P i n k e r t o n s and spies em ployed against the Federa l i on . O f bru ta l and s tocky phys ica l demeanor he is most i n s u l t i n g to the social is ts about t own , even us ing v io lence am of fens ive language. So unpopular is he that there is l i ab le to be trouble over his presence at the t r i a l as th rep iese i i ta t ive of the Rev iew.

The R a t h d r u m T r i b i makes feeble echo o f i t l pace setter, the Re view, a i m i n g to pre judice and poison the minds of the ] pie through i ts u n t r u t h f u l report! . It stated that tin Spokesman reporter went on the stand and re i te ra ted that M r s . H a z l c t t ha stated to h i m that she was go iug to Ra thdurm to educate the A d a m s ju ry a de l ibera te fa l sehood as the reporter had den ied express ly that she sai that, the s ta tement be ing in the head lines w h i c h he admi t t ed j » e r e w r i t t e n by another party. B u t what is a l i t t l e one horse cap i t a l i s t sheet f o r that is

s t a rv ing on the ragged edge of syco­phancy i f i t is not to l i cksp i t t l e to i t l cap i ta l i s t bosses that feed i t on the p o l i t i c a l c rumbs f r o m the plutoerat ie table.

I d a Crouch-Haz le t t .

th. t i .

R a t h d r u m , Ida., N o v . 9.

On Thur sday the prosecution under­

took to in t roduce the test imony of her

and M r s . A r c h i e P h i l l i p s that waa

g i v e n at the W a l l a c e t r i a l . The P h i l l i p s people were jumpers

f r o m the M a r b l e C r e e k d i s t r ic t who gave the most emphat ic evidence against A d a m s at the previous t r i a l . T h e y belonged to the c rowd of c l a i m jumpers who were banded together to depr ive the l a w f u l set t lers of t he i r r ights . P rosecu t ing A t t o r n e y K n i g h t made a f f i d a v i t that the state had t r i e d in every possible w a y to get these valuable witnesses to BS SfSBSal B u t they had le f t the j u r i s d i c t i o n of the state and gone out o f the country en­t i r e ly and cou ld not be found. M r . K n i g h t f u r t h e r a f f i r m e d that the P h i l ­l ips people had s ta ted that they had U-en so t e r r i f i ed by threats of violence, the a t tempted d y n a m i t i n g of the i r home and other outrages that they feared to g i v e a n y more tes t imony against the Fede ra t i on members. M r s . P h i l l i p s ' health was in a state of ner­vous collapse a n d P h i l l i p s had lost h i t job and could not get work, and since the b l o w i n g up of She r i f f B r o w n , he thought the best t h i n g he cou ld do f o r h imsel f was to get out of the coun­t ry .

H e y b u r n , the Demagogue.

A sensation w h i c h was a ve r i t ab l e explos ion o f . a p o l i t i c a l bomb i n the Idaho s i t u a t i n g , was caused by K n i g h t r ead ing a le t te r f rom Senator H e y b u r n r e l a t i ve to P h i l l i p s ' appoint­ment to a government job because of the service he had rendered the state by his t es t imony i n the Adams case.

It seems that the unders tanding was that P h i l l i p s was to be rewarded f o r his zeal in beha l f of the state in these

ises by an appo in tment to a govern­ment pos i t ion as t i m b e r cruiser upon

(Case* d ' .Ment i s Indian reserva-•in. C. .1. Shoemaker , t reasurer of

Koo tena i county , a po l i t i ca l go be-ween}, made a p p l i c a t i o n fo r P h i l l i p s o Senator H e y b u r n . Bu t H e y b u r n had

got wise H i s pa r ty is a f t e r the scalps f the o f f i c i a l s o f the Federa t ion , but

a n ' t get a l o n g wi thou t their votes. He knows the v o t i n g strength of the

•deration in Idaho. Hence i n spite f the se rv ice that c l a i m juti p> r P h i l -ipps has rendered the state author­

ities in t r y i n g to b r i n g about the con-ic t ion of A d a m s , H e y b u r n i t sudden-i' s t reek by g r i p p i n g pain* i n his

hi ther to e las t ic conscience and wr i t e s i Shoemaker that he has diseovt red

that P h i l l i p s was a H I M . p e r , and a iidgment was in court against h im oa

that charge, a m i h is appointment w;;« >ut of the ques t ion .

It leaked out that Shoemaker him stdf was •he man that wrote to the land

f f lce about P h i l l i p s , and thence i n ­formed H e y b u r n , o f the facts i n the

ase. H o w e v t r . H e y b u r n throw* P h i l ips overboard ra ther than go before

the Federa t ion voters wi th him as an incubus. A c c o r d i n g to the le t t s r presented by K n i g h t , Ph i l l i p s gets It back by c u t t i n g his job as i n f o r m e r , and the A d a m s prosecution is l e f t

ang l ing in the a i r metaphor ica l ly where it is the i r dear desire to have \da ins d a n g l i n g phys i ca l ly .

P i n k e r t o n i s h R u b b i s h . The melodramat ic phtute of b lood ,

thunder and br imatone . has the o ld P i n k e r t o n f lavor . Bu t the f r ame-up waa e f fec t ive .

V i o l a t e C o n s t i t u t i o n a l R i g h t . M r . Dar row made vigorous protcet

against any documenta ry evidvnee be-iug in t roduced agains t Adams where the de fendan t had no opor tun i ty to f a c e his answers. T h e judge sent the jury out a m i the case was argued. K n i g h t sa id the par t ies were beyt ud the j u r i s d i c t i o n of the court. H e had |aBSSi them to P o r t l a n d , and f r o m the best he could learn , they were now i n B r i t i s h C o l u m b i a .

M r . K n i g h t m a d " these statements u n d e r outh on the stand. Dar row asked him i f when ht> was in Spokane hun t ing the dynami t e , he *av» Th i e l e , the dect ive also. K n i g h t ad .n i t ' ed that he talket l to Thiele. M r . Har row then wanted to kuow i f h " had heard any­th ing about who hai l k i l l ed our wi t ness, H a r v e y B r o w n .

Judge M e H . I I made the argument on tin* competency of i l • witnesses. The I d a h o s ta tu te carries no provis­ion f o r east evidence. The r igh t ia u f undamen ta l one der ived f r o m M a g na i ' h a r t i that a man act used must be facet! by his accusers. T h e state has not this r igh t , but a defendant has. The I d a h o l aw is e x p l i c i t s n d

the utmost that ca: be done is to da-

(Coatiaued on Page t.)

i

Page 4: MONTANA NEWS (•list System . J^e •WNU AJra PIBI isur AY ... · MONTANA NEWS (•list System . J^e •WNU AJra PIBI isur.B AY THE SOCIALIST PAJKTY or NSMTANA •OL. TL HILENA MONTANA,

M O N T A N A N E W S . J e (•list System

• W N U AJra PIBI isur.B A Y T H E S O C I A L I S T P A J K T Y o r N S M T A N A

•OL. TL H I L E N A MONTANA, TH1TK8DAY, N O V E M B E R 14 1907. NO. 1

JURY SATISFACTORY TO A L L Rathdrum, Ida., Nov. 6.

Both tides seem to be well pleated

With the jury in the Adams rase. At­

torney Knight, leading counsel for the

prosecution, stated he was willing to

leave the outcome of the case in the

hands of the present jury.

Complexion of the Jury.

The jury and its occupation and poli-

Ratthdrum, Ida., Nov. 7. Mr. J . M Gentry and Mr. Edward

Htanttbury were two witnesses called by the state that have gone far to-wads strengthening Adams case in the trial now pending. These men were employed by the big timber companies in timber cruising. On one of these trips their party penetrated into the heavy, brushy woods, and there came upon the remains of a dead body lying

We a r c A p p o s e d t o g o v e r n m e n t by injunction. We arc opposed to any method o f Jurisprudence which makos a czar of a judge, al­low him to make arbitrary laws, and sentence men to jail for viola-don of his self made law. We are opposed to government by in­junction because it deprives a man of the right of a trial by a jury of his peers. We do oppose and will oppose any and all acts of court or king snbverslve of democratic institutions and destructive of alJ liberty.

'•• t ics are: M . B a r t o , Sucker U k c , g 0 | n e ^ l t , v t m a t h a t t h e y

rancher , and votes m i x e d t i c k e t ; Oeo.

P r i c e , 1'ost Ka i l s , m i l l h a n d , r epub l i can ;

C . A . Waters , Coeur d ' A l e n e s boat cap

t a i n , democrat W . G o r w o o d , L a k e

creek, f a rmer , democra t ; Char les Det-

temur l , Post F a l l s , merchant , demo­

c ra t ; H. A . V a r n u m , Qatar d ' A l e n e s ,

carpenter, r e p u b l i c a n ; J o h n ('. Cor ton ,

Ra thdrun i , f a rmer , democra t ; P . A . M c

A r t h u r , M i c a B a y . f a r m e r , republ ican ;

M i l t o n I ' iper , A t h o l , f a r m e r , democrat ;

M a t h c w M i l l e r , R a t h d r u m , farmer , |s>

mocra t ; J . T. H a r l a n , Host , f a rmer de­

mocra t ; H . F . House, R a t h d r u m , ranch­

er, democrat.

Va rnum was labor candidate for

mayor at Coeur d ' A l e n e s last sp r ing .

M i l l e r , D i t t emore a n d - H o r l a n have

been members of labor unions. N i n e

of the jurors have been homesteaders.

The state exerc ised a l l its peremp

tory r igh ts whi le the defense used on ly

seven peremptory chal lenges, pass ing

the panel twice E a c h t ime this p r iv ­

i lege is employed it exhausts a pcrem

tory , and when the j u r y was complete

the dt fense had but one lef t ia Mailt] Clarence H a r r o w , l e a d i n g , counsel

f o r the defense, entered objec t ion to

the state h a v i n g lit peremptory chal l ­

enges, s ay ing the l aw g i v i n g it

p r i v i l e g e was passed

Adams was t r i ed one.

facta, T h e abjaattaa

t h i s a f t e r Hteve

and was ex post was overruled,

it was made on the t h i r d peremptory chal lenge of the state last week and met w i t h the same f a t e . A n except ion was entered.

Tria l Begins.

Wednesday morn ing the first wi t

newses were ca l led by the prosecution.

M r s . Thomas , mother of Fred T y l e r ,

was first on the s tand, and related the

faeti about her f a m i l y coming out

f r o m M i c h i g a n f r o m the t imber tSM

t ry—herse l f and t w o daughters and

a f t e r wards F r e d S h e described the

apjearancc o f T y l e r and the t a k i n g up

of clams through a locator , one . lack

K u c r s t e i n .

H a r r o w ' s cross e x a m i n a t i o n brought

out that T y l e r w o r k e d i n the woods

i n M i c h i g a n that he had no money o f

his own but was f u r n i s h e d money to

bu i ld his cab in and get supplies, and

that Iks mother and sisters were to

be located, on c la ims i n the tame way . In several of T y l e r ' s let ters he had

w r i t t e n his nod her not to w o r r y about h im. When D a r r o w asked her what there was to w o r r y about, she said the w i l d an ima l s i n the woods where her son was go ing .

Harrow said , " A r c y o u sure M were not a f r a i d of the homesteaders instead of the c o n g o r s ! "

The evidence show that in a l l prob­a b i l i t y the T y l e r s Were s i m p l y a f a m i l y of jumpers b rought out f r o m the M i c h i g a n woodt b y B . R . L e w i s to take up lands f r o m the homesteaders f o r the b i g lumber cap i ta l i s t s .

B. R. L e w i s i t one of the vi les t c r im­ina ls that ever enr iched himself i n a new count ry by o v e r r i d i n g the r ights of the poor, t t e a l i n g and law break­i n g in order to ob ta in h i s r i c h e r H e

it a banker and wealthy lumber man

and hat made himself rich by hit

Crimea. In one of Tyler'a letters be taid it

waa part of the bargain that they were to get medicine from Kueratein, thr loeator.

Tyler's lister gave him a revolver to take with him on thit trip, show iug that he anticipated danger

l e f t i t there, and a f t e r w a r d s the T y l e r f a m i l y heard of i t , and went in and took possession o f i t . Deputy SlierifT W i l l i a m s was encountered acc iden ta l l y and taken in w i t h them. These s tor ies completely change the complex ion of the commonly accepted idea i n the

popular mind eoi r u i n g the case. It hat been genera l ly s ta ted that A d a m s was i n c r i m i n a t e d purely by his own

T W O confess ion, and the body of T y l e i f o u n d acco rd ing to his own di rec t ions . The test imony o f these witnesses ut­te r ly discredi t th i s v i ew. The body was f o u n d by accident , the iden t i f i cn t ion is very meager, and i f the stat< is depending u p o n the ha l f crazed con fess ion of a man tor tured by f e a r and a f t e r w a r d s comple te ly repudia ted by him, i ts chances arc p re t ty s l i m to head another Federa t ion man in to e te rn i ty that way .

Making an Example. The secret of the whole mat ter i a

tha t the b i g t imber companies want to make an example out of S t eve A d a m s so that i n the f u t u r e no ont w i l l in te r fe re w i t h thei r j umpers i n the interest of so unimpor tant a f a c t o r as homesteadert . They must get some one, and Steve as a f r i e n d of S i m p k i n s , whose c la im was among those that were pimped, is a convenicct charac ter to sacr i f ice .

A s the t r i a l progresses M r . H a w lev is s i t t i n g w i t h the s ta te ' s a t torneys wa tch ing what t ran spires, and m a k i n g f requent suggestions.

Not much interest is man i f e s t ed M I the t r i a l by the towu people. The general s y m p a t h y seems to bo w i t h Adams. The very fac t that these Inn her c ru i s ing par t ies went up to exam ine t imln-r a l ready set t led upon, show that the r igh t s of sett lers were ii»nor ed. T y l e r hai l had a cabin bu i l t f o r h im on the v e r y piece of land where S i m p k i n s ' c a b i n was a l ready bui l t and where he was l i v i n g

A n Unwilling Witness. The t e s t imony of George H . Root

one of the set t lers in the M a r b l e Creek d i s t r i c t , proved a r emarkab le corroborat ion of the in jus t i ce that is hea|Hi 'd upon the small proper ty owners by the great aggregat ions u f c ap i t a l Beet is a d a p i x T y o u n g f e l l o w that c l e rks in a Hardware store in Boise when he i t not on his c l a i m . H i s ev­ery act ion and word al lowed that he d i d not wish to t e s t i f y f o r that s ide of the case, and had been brought there against h is w i l l . H e is a person ul f r i e n d of S i m p k i n s , and was inter i s t e i l as a l l the settlers were, i n de­f e n d i n g their homes against the th ieves that were opera t ing under the protee t ion of the b i g lumber companies .

It seems that one Sunday the home­steaders met at an ind igna t ion meet­i n g in the woods, to d i s c u t i among themselves wha t should be done con­ce rn ing thei r homesteads and the Nor the rn P a c i f i c s t r ip w h i c h had jus t I H ' C I I opened.

A t th i s mee t ing A d a m s was pretent w i t h S i m p k i n s , and many others whose homes were menaced by the rapacious t imber th ieves . These men of the woods were a rmed ; as one wi tness sa id , " i t was unsafe to go unprotec ted in those d a y s . " D i f f e r e n t onet t a l k e d at t h i t mee t ing . The discuss ion was as regards wha t the settlert should do to protect their homes. The case of one c l a i m jumper was already in court, and a number advited that they pa t i e n t l y awa i t the issue in this case Others were for g e t t i n g the jumpers out of the coun t ry .

Asking Advice. K. i . . t testified to a conversa t ion he

had w i t h S i m p k i n s where in Simpkins asked his advice as to what he thought he ought to do w i t h the maa (Tver)

GOVERNMENT BY INJUNCTION EVIDENCE F A V O R A B L E TO A D A M S

L A T E S T FROM SCENE OF B A T T L E R a t h d r u m , N o v . l O .

M r . M i l l a r d , the uncle of S teve

A d a m s , is an in teres t ing figure at the

t r i a l . S t e v e was arrested on his ranch

at Ha ines . Oregon, a short d is tance

nit f r o m B a k e r C i t y . The k i n d heart

•d o ld gent leman is a fine specimen

of the o ld soldier , h a v i n g served

through the c i v i l wa r on the confeder­

als s ide. He is 71 years of age but

s t ra ight a m i vigorous w i t h ha i r a n d

in the office of ex-Governor M o r r i s o n

be fo re a number of witnesses.

Deep P l o t t e d Consp i racy .

Adams was held wi thout charge or

pre l iminary e x a m i n a t i o n un t i l a f t e r

his uncle got h im out on a wr i t o f

habeas corpus through ex Governor

M o r r i s o n whom he employed as at-

toi ney.

The day of the i r r i g a t i o n congress

Mr. M i l l a r d had asked to take d inner

beard yet da rk . H i s mind has Keen w i t h his nephew in the peni ten t ia ry ,

so ag i t a t ed by the shock ing Injus t ices T o his surprise W a r d e n W h i t n e y grant-

has perce ived in connect ion w i t h j ed the request, a n d he had a l ine din-

the arrest of his nephew that he has ner w i t h Steve and bis f a m i l y . T h i s

lost a l l f a i t h in any jus t i ce or rec t i - w a * the first t ime he had got to see

tude under th is government H e has h i m alone tdnce his arrest .

become en t i re ly devoted to the pro­gress of th i s case, and says he means to see it th rough no matter wha t i t costs. He says his w i f e is equal ly de­te rmined to stay w i t h the sad a n d t ragic s i t u a t i o n t i l t i ts f ina l issue.

A s an instance of the k i n d heart of the old gent leman he not only has real c,I eight e ih ldren o f his own but besides these has p rov ided and ca red f o r ten orphan ch i ld ren t i l l they were g r o w n . He raised Steve ami his two brothers , (although they w e n ' f a i r l y f a i r l y wel l g rown when their mother d ied .

Whi tney ca l l ed i n d u r i n g the v i s i t and made this s tatement , " I f Steve s tays wi th the state and helps hang these men ( r e f e r r i n g to the Wes te rn Federa l ion o f f i c i a l s ) he w i l l be given

• complete immun i ty . T o r t u r e Beg ins .

A f t e r this v i s i t , on a pretense of aearching Hteve f o r a n y t h i n g that his uncle sjlgfcl have g i v e n h im, he was s t r ipped, taken f r o m the woman ' s wa rd where he had been l i v i n g in com Iterative comfor t , and put in a mur Saver's eell The P i n k e r t o n scavengers were then admi t t ed to h im—the whole

Adams came f r o m P a r k C i t y , F t a h , '< g H J l , \ „ , harpies. H a w l e y , Good ing , M« to h is u n c l e ' s ranch in J u n e . He had P a r i a n . Th ie le and a l l the rest not be,, , in h i d i n g at a l l as the mine ' , 8 t e V ( . | , .„ | ,„.,.„ j-nled f , „ , \ . l y ! i

o w n e r s ' s ide of th is p ropos i t ion h a s j i n Colarado at the t ime of the indus spread broadcast . He was arrested ) r i a l , r ( , u l , l e s and was then turned out the next F e b r u a r y H e was h a u l i n g w i t h o u t a n y t r i a l or charge. The hay when S tounenberg was k i l l e d . H e . hardships he endured then seem to had located a ranch near Maker C i t y , have un rvasj M a W h e n he was re H i s t roubles and detent ion have ve ry a r r ( < t , „ | he was made to bel ieve that near ly caused h i m to loae i t , but h is : m . w , , u l d be mobbed i f taken back to uncle says he t h i n k s he can save i t c d o r a d o . f , , r u i l " When T h i e l e pretended to " l o - a t e

The mother sa id that K u e r s t e i n bai l who had bu i l t a house on his c l a i m i n f o r m e d Iter that l awyers had been Root adv ised to wait t i l l the c l a i m s retained to take .-barge of the contests

if there should bo any. Mr. Thomas, the stepfather of Tyler,

told hit tale of the events preceding Tyler's death, ami identified the clothes, hair and skull, which were ex­hibited.

Darrow went after him strenuously on this testimony, and asked him how he could identify the hair as Tyler's when he admits that he could not iden tify his Wife's or that of his sons. He attacked him on the shape of the tkull in the same way. He also brought out that no post mortem examination wat ever held, nor Was there ever a coroner's jury.

Ida Crouch-Hazlett.

were settled i n court. A t t o r n e y K n i g h t kept t r y i n g to

draw f r o m Root that Simpkins had said something violent at t h i t mee t ing but his closest ques t ion ing f a i l e d to oh. it a n y t h i n g of the k i n d . T h e pro s e d i t i o n t r i ed to draw out what the a l t e rna t ive w a s that they wan ted to do w i t h the set t lers . Root said, "to go to them and n o t i f y them that they wanted them to leave the c o u n t r y . '

S teve Logan was another se t t ler who waa at th is protest meet ing , that was summoned b y the state . H e p roved equal ly u n w i l l i n g to t e s t i f y f o r the prosecution, and was equa l ly e f l l c a c i oua to the cause of A d a m s .

Ida C r o u c h - H a z l e t t .

A f t e r O r c h a r d ' s " c o n f e s s i o n " a C a l d w e l l a t torney f i led the compla in t against A d a m s on wh ich he was arrest ed. De tec t ive T h i e l e went out and made the arrest and announced that he had " l o c a t e d ' ' A d a m s , whereas it had never been the sl ightest d i f f i c u l t y to " l o c a t e " h im. Instead of b e i n g t a k e n to the C a l d w e l l j a i l , he w a s •has s t ra ight through to Boise w i t h

his f a m i l y and lodged in the pen­itent i ray where he was kept f o r seven months wi thout b a i l , and wi thout a harge b e i n g lodged against h i m .

Closely Guarded. No one was a l lowed to see h im ex

ept the guards and the ar i s tocra ts of the Idaho repub l i can a d m i n i s t r a t i o n — leesUagi Bo rah , H a w l e y and a l l that

s w a r m of cap i t a l i s t parasi tes. Three imea his uncle t r i ed to see h i m , but ou ld never get to h im except in the

presence o f the guards. H i * m a i l was al l -.pen.'.I and read by the warden Hi> was shut off f r o m any c o m m u n i a t i o n w i t h the outs ide wor ld or any onf ideu tu i l re la t ions w i t h his f r i e n d s .

I m m e d i a t e l y a f t e r the ar res t of A d a m s , M r . M i l l a r d , who was i n Texas , wro to a f o r m e r f r i e n d of his, one M . S B o n d , , t o get C . A . M o o r e , a l a w y e r of B a k e r c i t y , and go to Boise and t r y and get b a i l f o r h i m . Moore and B o n d went to see G o o d i n g the first t h i n g when they a r r i v e d at Boise .

T h r o u g h some unexp la ined ove r s igh t A d a m s lay i n the p e n i t e n t i a r y a l o n g t i m e w i t h no a t t en t ion f r o m the F e d ­e ra t ion . It was then that G o o d i n g f u r n i s h e d the t r a i to r M o o r e w i t h mon ey to go to Colorado and see the gov crnor , and seo if he c o u l d not ob t a in i m m u n i t y f o r A d a m s , p r o v i d e d he w o u l d corrobora te O r c h a r d .

There can be no quest ion about skis l a t t e r instance as Moore admi t t ed this

h im, he phoned B r o w n , the sheriff at Bake r C i t y , who came out b r i n g i n g several others w i t h h i m . B r o w n sa id to Steve, " I am on the ins ide ; do what they want y o u to, a n d y o u ' l l be back* in a f e w d a y s . " A t M r . M i l l a r d ' I expense on the preced ing t r i a l B r o w n came to W a l l a c e a n d tes t i f ied to this for the defense. S o one can set- which side would have the incen t ive to b low him up, the P inke r to t i s or the defense

In regard to the P h i l l i p s ' y a r n about d y n a m i t e b e i n g f o u n d i n thei r vard in -Spokane , it is fishy wi th a P i n kerton flavor f r o m the start. I f the tale were genuine why litis no invest! ga l lon been made. It is hardly l i k e l y that T h i e l e ' s P i u k e r t o u s would over l o o k a bet l i k e that . Yet , no detei t u . s have been put to w o r k . A n why 10 pounds w i t h caps in a pa i l when one j io i i i id wou ld blow up the whole ne ighborhood f

Forcing the Confession. So f a r as the " c o n f e s s i o n " is con

eerned, S teve c o u l d n ' t have w r i t t e n i t i f he had t r i e d . He has no educat ion The human harpies f ixed i t up to aui t themselves, took S teve to a notary , and he signed i t . H e thought he was gone anyway and it made no di f ference wha t he d id .

Al though M r . M i l l a r d could not see his nephew alone, ho could see h i m i n the presence o f M o o r o , the man who had be t rayed h i m .

The rea l purpose o f th is whole s h a m e f u l pe r secu t ion is to get S teve to swear agains t the Co lo rada men, and t h i n support O r c h a r d ' i w o n d e r f u l revelat ion*, Vi the rwise unsupported.

The t r a i t o r M o o r e a d m i t i that f lood ing, Borah and H a w l e y pa id him a handsome fee.

C o n t i n u e d o n P a g e 4.)

MRS. H A Z L E T T ON TRIAL On F r i d a y , N o v e m b e r 15, M r s Hae-

l e U ' s t r i a l comos off in the super ior

court a t Spokane . The s t ruggle ahe

is m a k i n g agains t the unjust t y r anny

and i m p o s i t i o n of the cap i t a l i s t cour ts

is al l the han l e r as l o c a l Spokane ,

led by a number of w o u l d be pecudo

socialist*, has deserted to the enemy.

^ T h i s f r e e speech s t rugg le that the

state of Washington is w a g i n g w i t h

the authorities is of the utmost im­

portance to the future dissemination

uf the soeialist doctrine. Whatever

aid the f e l l o w worke r s of M r s . l iar ,

lot ciui b r i n g to the issue, w i l l neveT

be more needed. She is fighting th is

bat t le f o r us a l l , not in her own in te r

cat at a l l but aga ins t i t , and c e r t a in ly

no one but a c o w a r d w i l l leave ber

to bear the brunt o f the fight alone

If we cannot a l l be arrested and

go to j a i l f o r m a i n t a i n i n g the r ights

of a f r ee people, we can l o y a l l y s tand

by and suppor t those who do.

The report of the t r i a l w i l l be g i v e n

our next issue.

R a t h d r u m , Ida., N o v . 9. K v e r y t h i n g is encouraging f o r the

defendant i n the Steve A d a m s case so f a r . There is n o t h i n g that d i r ec t l y connects h im w i t h the cr ime of k i l l i n g F r e d T y l e r , and the indi rec t evidence is only such as might be adduced in any f r o n t i e r w a r f a r e ; where there are two f a c t i ons in a communi ty that hate each other, and especia l ly where there is so much at s take as a b i t t e r contest

f a rmer s and poor men who have se t t led on the l and under the provis­ions of the government , to make homes f o r themselves, and have a place on Sod's green ear th , and a bunch of

robber jumpers pa id by great cap i ta l ­i s t ic interests to break the law and de p r i v e the w o r k i n g class o f t he i r r ights .

Steve was w i t h his f r i e n d S i m p k i n s whose c l a i m had been jumped . B o t h were members of the Wes te rn F*>1

ra t ion and that was vnough to con­nect them w i t h murders and dvna mi te acco rd ing to that aveng ing angel

f the M i n e O w n e r s ' A s s o c i a t i o n , S leu th M c P a r l a n .

I t i s the op in ion o f those who have • II..wed the cha in of events closely

that not a hai r of S teve A d a m s ' head w i l l ever be touched. N o t o n l y is sll evidence l a c k i n g against h im but it is not be l i evab le that any j u r y o f poor hard w o r k i n g f a rmers in this count ry , as these man are, w i l l ever b r i n g in any verd ic t anywhere in f a v o r of the t imber robbers and against honest sett lers.

F a i r T r i a l . The court proceedings arc b e i n g con

lucted i l l as f a i r a manner ; is could be expecte I under a system of laws ami ins t i tu t ions based upon the monu mental c r ime o f the despol ia t ion of he w o r k i n g class ami the robbery and

murder of the highest hopes and op­por tun i t i e s of the human race.

l o d g e Woons is a very k i n d , pleas­ant man, and his ru l ings are g i v i n g the defendant the extreme la t i tude that the l aw a l lows h i m . N o one can compla in of his lack of < turtesy to the a t torneys f o r the defense. In fact he has sa id that Har row was the strongest man he ever saw at the bar.

V e r y l i t t l e interest is man i fes t ed in the case by the townspeople of Rath d rum, even the t i ny cour t room be ing filled on ly a por t ion o f the t ime .

Steve is be ing t reated as w e l l as could be expected under the e i rcum stances. The sher i f f has re laxed the

lose confinement in which he was held at first . It was h a v i n g a v e r y bad effect on the eyes o f Adams, and tin a l ly the doctor sa id he would go b l i n d unless he was g i v e n outdoor exercise, and now every day he may be seen •ut w i t h S h e r i f f Mat-Donald or a bai

l i f f t a k i n g a w a l k ab tut t own . He bj a lways v e r y nea t ly dressed, ani l as one meets the two men there is no th ing to ind ica te that a desperate Federa t ion murderi r is w a l k i n g loose around lasva.

C o r r u p t i n g C a p i t a l i s t P ress . The cap i t a l i s t papers are d o i n g ex

ac t ly as they d id in southern Idaho using eve ry s in i s te r and v i c i o u s means to misrepresent the fac t s , m a l i g n tin Fede ra t i on , and pre jud ice the minds of the pub l ic against the Federa t ion men th rough the avenues of th i s case E v e r y absurd and on the face of i t f a k e tale is t ro t ted out i n sober earn est as re l i ab le ma te r i a l . T h e F e d era t ion men are branded as c r i m i n a l s i n every l ine of i t s p ros t i tu ted m ports. It is even r i v a l i n g the States man in i t s unp r inc ip l ed tight against these w o r k i n g men and is m a k i n g it se l f so obnoxious to the w o r k i n g class and in f a c t a l l f a i r minded people throughout the Ra thd rum cominun u v that i t s c i r c u l a t i o n has f a l l e n off per cept bly . In f ac t a movement i t on foo t to boycot t i t comple te ly through out th is d i s t n . t . Its reporter , S t a t i c has aroused a great deal of an tagonism and d i s l i k e not only by the u t t e r ly false reports he is p r i n t i n g but by his unpopular and b u l l d o z i n g ways . It i t even s ta ted that he is one of the

ratt iest P i n k e r t o n s and spies em ployed against the Federa l i on . O f bru ta l and s tocky phys ica l demeanor he is most i n s u l t i n g to the social is ts about t own , even us ing v io lence am of fens ive language. So unpopular is he that there is l i ab le to be trouble over his presence at the t r i a l as th rep iese i i ta t ive of the Rev iew.

The R a t h d r u m T r i b i makes feeble echo o f i t l pace setter, the Re view, a i m i n g to pre judice and poison the minds of the ] pie through i ts u n t r u t h f u l report! . It stated that tin Spokesman reporter went on the stand and re i te ra ted that M r s . H a z l c t t ha stated to h i m that she was go iug to Ra thdurm to educate the A d a m s ju ry a de l ibera te fa l sehood as the reporter had den ied express ly that she sai that, the s ta tement be ing in the head lines w h i c h he admi t t ed j » e r e w r i t t e n by another party. B u t what is a l i t t l e one horse cap i t a l i s t sheet f o r that is

s t a rv ing on the ragged edge of syco­phancy i f i t is not to l i cksp i t t l e to i t l cap i ta l i s t bosses that feed i t on the p o l i t i c a l c rumbs f r o m the plutoerat ie table.

I d a Crouch-Haz le t t .

th. t i .

R a t h d r u m , Ida., N o v . 9.

On Thur sday the prosecution under­

took to in t roduce the test imony of her

and M r s . A r c h i e P h i l l i p s that waa

g i v e n at the W a l l a c e t r i a l . The P h i l l i p s people were jumpers

f r o m the M a r b l e C r e e k d i s t r ic t who gave the most emphat ic evidence against A d a m s at the previous t r i a l . T h e y belonged to the c rowd of c l a i m jumpers who were banded together to depr ive the l a w f u l set t lers of t he i r r ights . P rosecu t ing A t t o r n e y K n i g h t made a f f i d a v i t that the state had t r i e d in every possible w a y to get these valuable witnesses to BS SfSBSal B u t they had le f t the j u r i s d i c t i o n of the state and gone out o f the country en­t i r e ly and cou ld not be found. M r . K n i g h t f u r t h e r a f f i r m e d that the P h i l ­l ips people had s ta ted that they had U-en so t e r r i f i ed by threats of violence, the a t tempted d y n a m i t i n g of the i r home and other outrages that they feared to g i v e a n y more tes t imony against the Fede ra t i on members. M r s . P h i l l i p s ' health was in a state of ner­vous collapse a n d P h i l l i p s had lost h i t job and could not get work, and since the b l o w i n g up of She r i f f B r o w n , he thought the best t h i n g he cou ld do f o r h imsel f was to get out of the coun­t ry .

H e y b u r n , the Demagogue.

A sensation w h i c h was a ve r i t ab l e explos ion o f . a p o l i t i c a l bomb i n the Idaho s i t u a t i n g , was caused by K n i g h t r ead ing a le t te r f rom Senator H e y b u r n r e l a t i ve to P h i l l i p s ' appoint­ment to a government job because of the service he had rendered the state by his t es t imony i n the Adams case.

It seems that the unders tanding was that P h i l l i p s was to be rewarded f o r his zeal in beha l f of the state in these

ises by an appo in tment to a govern­ment pos i t ion as t i m b e r cruiser upon

(Case* d ' .Ment i s Indian reserva-•in. C. .1. Shoemaker , t reasurer of

Koo tena i county , a po l i t i ca l go be-ween}, made a p p l i c a t i o n fo r P h i l l i p s o Senator H e y b u r n . Bu t H e y b u r n had

got wise H i s pa r ty is a f t e r the scalps f the o f f i c i a l s o f the Federa t ion , but

a n ' t get a l o n g wi thou t their votes. He knows the v o t i n g strength of the

•deration in Idaho. Hence i n spite f the se rv ice that c l a i m juti p> r P h i l -ipps has rendered the state author­

ities in t r y i n g to b r i n g about the con-ic t ion of A d a m s , H e y b u r n i t sudden-i' s t reek by g r i p p i n g pain* i n his

hi ther to e las t ic conscience and wr i t e s i Shoemaker that he has diseovt red

that P h i l l i p s was a H I M . p e r , and a iidgment was in court against h im oa

that charge, a m i h is appointment w;;« >ut of the ques t ion .

It leaked out that Shoemaker him stdf was •he man that wrote to the land

f f lce about P h i l l i p s , and thence i n ­formed H e y b u r n , o f the facts i n the

ase. H o w e v t r . H e y b u r n throw* P h i l ips overboard ra ther than go before

the Federa t ion voters wi th him as an incubus. A c c o r d i n g to the le t t s r presented by K n i g h t , Ph i l l i p s gets It back by c u t t i n g his job as i n f o r m e r , and the A d a m s prosecution is l e f t

ang l ing in the a i r metaphor ica l ly where it is the i r dear desire to have \da ins d a n g l i n g phys i ca l ly .

P i n k e r t o n i s h R u b b i s h . The melodramat ic phtute of b lood ,

thunder and br imatone . has the o ld P i n k e r t o n f lavor . Bu t the f r ame-up waa e f fec t ive .

V i o l a t e C o n s t i t u t i o n a l R i g h t . M r . Dar row made vigorous protcet

against any documenta ry evidvnee be-iug in t roduced agains t Adams where the de fendan t had no opor tun i ty to f a c e his answers. T h e judge sent the jury out a m i the case was argued. K n i g h t sa id the par t ies were beyt ud the j u r i s d i c t i o n of the court. H e had |aBSSi them to P o r t l a n d , and f r o m the best he could learn , they were now i n B r i t i s h C o l u m b i a .

M r . K n i g h t m a d " these statements u n d e r outh on the stand. Dar row asked him i f when ht> was in Spokane hun t ing the dynami t e , he *av» Th i e l e , the dect ive also. K n i g h t ad .n i t ' ed that he talket l to Thiele. M r . Har row then wanted to kuow i f h " had heard any­th ing about who hai l k i l l ed our wi t ness, H a r v e y B r o w n .

Judge M e H . I I made the argument on tin* competency of i l • witnesses. The I d a h o s ta tu te carries no provis­ion f o r east evidence. The r igh t ia u f undamen ta l one der ived f r o m M a g na i ' h a r t i that a man act used must be facet! by his accusers. T h e state has not this r igh t , but a defendant has. The I d a h o l aw is e x p l i c i t s n d

the utmost that ca: be done is to da-

(Coatiaued on Page t.)

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