The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917, August 03, 1911, Image 3

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CHAPTER XIII.
3t • e very fc. an of Manhattan, right
im • ~!.'•■■■' nf the ntg’a moat con
Ife-'eJ dastrtrt. an Imposing edifice
•1 *• .* tcr.e n-edM-ral in Its Style of
**” towered high above all
- " - »rc:tg dingy offices and
*■., .Si'. ».n ,-ut* Its massive coo
- 'i-p wills, poin'ed turrets.
■ ~ ■ - 3 rap--* and kng. narrow, slit
y w;t . v* heat dy barred, gave It
tt* art *- "t of a fstda) fortress iacor.
t -i .* * st >«t plumb in the midst
'• ivj «. t t..ry New York. The
4 **i r f Broadway i uturned a
• - t ;• -f blocks away; in tie distance
'■4 f " '*». srac-fui spans of
<’ • * ’trade* Jammed with its op.
K • :» . ’•■utu* <d tansy interurbaa
•tv" Tbe adjacent streets were
£. >i with ft* din of burry.ng crowd*,
tbe ra ’ ► sf v«t • lea. tbe er'e# of vets
»t«r» the r iarg ■ f street car*, the ugh*
wgt • •'"Eg asstor. ■ btks Tbe ac
' o ! ‘•aiiag tfe of the n.*'tropoH*
- .-i ■ C -ke a rising flood about tbe
'.i urs • w*Ls. yet there was no re
r> 'witi.;t. Cri*. silent, sinister,
•t- *v iwlenc popularly known as
• 1 usa*'. *... •:. d to have nothing
the daily activities of
x * * t it. » *.:rt not withstand
tg • uappily j.»>ed an important
par*
T • - • ' i - e a vastly d!f
ferett pia to the old Jail from
■ t - • * t t it* SM’anrbuly cognomen
T« iat there is not L# slightest Justk
. a. • 1 - ti e lug- brtous epithet ap
. .* : it it 1 t It the old days, when
mat - e .n an *y to man was less a
'•rt of speech titan a cold, merciless
fact the -Tomb#- described an Intol
*»t - ar.4 d:-gracefu’ condition fairly
e-'un.-*:* F finer:y the cell* In
t tit ac fortunate prisoner* were
"farmed while awaiting trial were sit
•A’ei deep under ground and tad nei
ther ghl nor ventilation A man
c-gfit be g..!t.» #* of the ofl>-ti*e with
which be war • barged yet while
await i c an opportunity to prove hi*
nn-wn- e te was condemned to spend
d»<» sometimes months. In what was
v better tans a grate Literally,
is was buried alive A party of for
egnsn vlaitteg the prison one day
were start:ed a: seeing human beings
eonfised ia Such hole* "They look
like • mbs'” cried some one New
Y' '% was amoael at the singularly
*ppr«i-wria-e appellative and tt has
stack to the prison ever since.
B.’ -.re* chnnge and tns'itutions
a irk tS-u. is man becomes more
ned he tt- at# the lawbreaker
with tu- re humanity Probably sort
erg til always need It* prisoners,
tout a* we become move enlightened
we insist on treating our criminals
more iron tbe phyandcgktal and psy.
chuadcical standpvdnt* thus is the
rw-i brutal barbarous manner of the
dark age* in art. r words the foHoI
vgwt meant* that tl* lawbreaker has
greater E*f*d of the physician than he
has of the Jailer.
I '-C.S? .tt Ci,, f-I IM I If a [OSD
in use *ly It la adc.lrat.ly cob
s'rocted. '"utntsodwma. well ventilated
Ti«* cell* are large and well lighted,
wufc mat'iuUe rots ar.d all the
modern sanitary tmngeir.er.U There
are roont corridors (or daily egercise
and lug nans shower baths ran be ob
ta W !-w ter the asking There are
efeapel* lor the religiously inclined
ana a library tor the studious. The
food is Wholesome and weil prepared
at a large s- mptiously clean kitchen
altum’ed «• the top Boer Carping
rntie# bare indeed, declared the
Tomb* to be too Insurious. declaring
:ha: habitual criminals enjoy a stay
at the prom and a-tually commit
crime m> that they may enjoy some of
its hot el-like am.lt rw
it wn» with a sinking heart and a
dun. gnawing ns as* at apprehension
that Annie descended from a south
wound Vsdisad a venae car in Center
street and approached the small por
tal tender the forbidding gray walla.
She had t tolled I prison oner before,
whew her father died She retaein
bd. AS the depressing ride in the train
to Sing Sing, the formidable steel
door* ahd ponderous baits, the narrow
retto. end with Its involuntary occu
pant m degrading stripes aad closely
cropped hair, and the uniformed
guards armed arith rifles She retaezu
p.red how her mother wept and how
she had wandered why they kept her
Ib<£>
Third degree
^CHARLES KLEIN Y
ARTHUR3HORNBLQW Y
IL LUSTRATIONS BY RAY WALTERS
C_»'Wi»T i*C9. BY" tM Oi^LiNCMAM CGnptYY
r r da-da in such an ugly place. To
" :rk that af-er all these years she
* -» aea:n to go through a similar ex
perience.
c' had nerved herself for the or
Ar.xn as as she was to see How
aT - ar.d :-ra fr m his lips all that
:. 1 hanfx :.ed. she feared that she
. : r.*-i»-r he able to see him behind
' • t-'r> uh.hout breaking down. Vet
: r. h. s r -rig so she could work
’ • set him fr-. So much had hap
J in 'he las- two days. It seemed
■ tt. since the police had sent for
' at c.!C!.icl:t to burry down to the
\s-r- r:a. yet it was only two days
-«• Tlmorning following her try
- ■’ r . v. with Cap* Clinton in
c- ad mar.'s apartment sh.e had
' -• a '<> s.... Howard, but without suc
•s- The police held him a close
I-'-- : r. pretvt.uir.a- that he might
: at attempt upon his life. There
uao : othii , for her to do but wait.
Intuitively she realized the neces
-■'y of immediately securing the ser
ing crowd. There were fruit peddlers,
sweat shop workers, sporty looking
men, negroes and flashy looking wo
men. All seemed callous and indif
ferent, as if quite at home amid the
sinister surroundings of a prison. One
or two others appeared to belong to a
more respectable class, their sober
manner and careworn faces reflecting
silently the humiliation and shame
they felt at their kinsman's disgrace.
The small barred windows did not
permit of much ventilation and, as
the day was warm, the odor was sick
ening. Annie looked around fearfully
cr.d humbly took her place at the end
of the long line which slowly worked
i's way to the narrow inner grating,
where credentials were closely scruti
nized The horror of the place seized
upon her. She wondered who all these
poor people were and what the pris
oners whom they came to see had
done to offend the majesty of the law.
The prison was filled with policemen
and keepers and running in and out
with messages and packages were a
“So You're the Wife of Jeffries, Whom They’ve Got for Murder, EhT”
ru es of an able lawyer. There was
:>o doutt of 'Howard's innocence, but
she r- ailed wi?h a shiver that even
innocent persons have suffered capi
tal punishmer.* because they were un
able to establish their innocence, so
overwhelming w»re the appearances
against them. He must have the best
lawyer to be had. regardless of ex
p -e Only one name occurred to
ber the name of a man of interna
■uunal reputation, the mere mention
of whoa" name in a courtroom filled
the hearts of the innocent with hope
and the guilty with dread. That man
was Judge Brewster. She hurried
downtown to bis office and waited an
hour before he could see her. Then
he told her. politely but coldly, that
he m ust decline to take her case. He
knew well who she was and he eyed
her w ith some curiosity, but his man
ner was frigid and discouraging.
There were plenty of lawyers in New
York, he said She must go else
where. Politely he bowed her out.
Half of a precious day was already
lost. Judge Brewster refused the
cu.-e To whom could she turn now?
In despair, almost desperate, she
drove uptown to Riverside drive and
forced an entrance into the Jeffries
home. Here, again, she was met with
a rebuff Still not discouraged, she
returned to Judge Brewster’s office
He * . s out and she sat there an hour
waiting to see him. Night came and
he did not return. Almost prostrated
with nervous exhaustion, she returned
to thetr deserted little fiat in Harlem
It was going to be a hard fight, she
saw that. But she would keep right
on. no matter at what cost Howard
uld not be >ft alone to perish with
out a hand to save him. Judge Brew
ster must come to his rescue. He
uid cot refuse. She would return
eg: >a to bis office ttis afternoon and
it there ail day long, if necessary,
until be promised to take the case.
He alone could save him. She would
go to the lawyer ar.d beg him on her
! knees if necessary, but first she must
■ s<-«» Howard and hid him take courage.
A lew doorway from Center street
gave access to the gray fortress. At
the heavy steel gate stood a portly
P' Vetnan armed with a big key. Each
time before letting people in or out
be inserted this key in a ponderous
lock. The gate would not open mere
ly by turning the handle. This was
to prevent the escape of prisoners,
who might possibly succeed in ruach
mg so far as the door, but could not
open the steel gate without the big
key When once any one entered the
prison he was not permitted to go out
again except on a signal from a
keeper.
When Annie entered she found the
: reception room filled with visitors,
men and women of all ages and na
tionalities. who. like herself, had come
to see some relative or friend in
, trouble. It was a motley and interest
number of men in neat linen suits.
She asked a woman who they were.
"Them's trusties — prisoners that
has special privileges in return for
work they does about the prison.”
The credentials were passed upon
slowly and Annie, being the twentieth
in line, found it a tedious wait. In
front of her was a bestial looking ne
gro. behind her a woman whose cheap
jewelry, rouged face and extravagant
dress proclaimed her profession to be
the most ancient in the world. But
at last the gate was reached. As the
doorkeeper examined her ticket he
looked up at her with curiosity. A
murderer is rare enough even in the
Tombs, to excite interest, and as she
passed on the attendants whispered
among themselves. She knew they
were talking about her. but she
steeled herself not to care. It was
BUNYIP MERELY LARGE SEAL
Scientist Sheds Light on Mysterious
Animal That Terrified Aus
tralian Aborigines,
Early settlers in Australia learned
from the blacks the legend of the
“bunyip.” a fearsome creature sup
posed to dwell in the swamps and to
terrify beholders from time to time.
Many appearances of this mysterious
animal have been reported, but in no
case was the evidence satisfactory or
conclusive. The latest story of the
“bunyip" comes from the D’ack
swamp near Stawell, 70 miles from
Melbourne. The director of the Mel
bourne too went up and succeeded in
viewing the animal through a power
ful field glass. He pronounced It to
be an unusually large seal. The zao
authorities have offered a reward of
$a0 for its capture.
Hypnotism ^nd Will Pcwer.
People used to think that persons
who could be hypnotized were defi
cient In will power, that It was some
j thing ol a stigma on thetr mental
: equipment. The experts know better
now. A writer in the Woman's Home
; Companion goes so far as to say that
; ih' more will power a person has the
. more readily he can be hypnotized.
Dr. Voisin. a French alienist, found
! that he could not hypnotize more than
ten per cent of the Inmates of the
'< rsylum with which he was connected,
j Whereas an English experimenter
named Vincent hypnotized with ease
; 36 per cent of a targe group of uai
: rersity men.
only a foretaste of other humiliation*
which she must expect.
A keeper now took charge of her
and led her to a room wheTe she waa
searched by a matron for concealed
weapons, a humiliating ordeal, to
which even the richest and most In
fluential visitors must submit with as
good grace as possible. The matron
was a hard looking woman of about
50 years, in whom every spark of hu
man pity and sympathy had been
killed during her many years of con
stant association with criminals. The
word “prison” had lost its meaning to
her. She saw nothing undesirable in
jail life, but locked upon the Tombs
rather as a kind of boarding house In
which people made short or long eo
i journs. according to their luck. She
| treated Annie unceremoniously, yet
j not unkindly.
I “So you’re the wife of Jeffries.
' whom they've got for murder, eh?"
she said, as she rapidly ran her hands
through the visitor's clothing.
“Yes," faltered Annie, "but it's all
a mistake, I assure you. My husband's
j perfectly innocent. He wouldn't hurt
j a fly.”
The woman grinned.
“They ail say that, m'm.” Lugubri
ously she added: “I hope you'11 ba
more lucky than some others were."
Annie felt herself grow cold. TYas
this a sinister prophecy? She shud
dered and, hastily taking a dollar from
her purse, slipped it into the matron s
' hand.
“May I go now?” she said.
“Yes. my dear: 1 guess you've got
i nothing dangerous on you. We have
to be very careful. I remember once
when we had that Hoboken murderer
here. He's the feller that cut ti3
wife’s head off and stuffed the body
in a barrel. His mother came here to
see him one day and what did I find
inside her stocking but an innocent
looking little round pill, and if yea
please, it was nothing less than prus
sic acid. Ho would have swallowed It
and the electric chair would have
been cheated. So you see how careful
we has to be."
Annie could not listen to any more.
The horror of having Howard class' d
with fiends of that description sickened
her. To the keeper she said quickly:
‘ Please take me to my husband.”
Taking another dollar from her
purse, she slipped the bill into the
man's hand, feeling that, here as
everywhere else, one must pay far
privileges and courtesies. Her guide
led the way and ushered her into an
elevator, which, at a signal, started
slowly upwards.
The cells ia the Tombs are arranged
in rows in the form cf an ellipse ia
the center of each of the six floors.
There is room to accommodate 900
prisoners of both sexes. The men are
confined in the new prison; the wom
en, fewer in number, in what remains of
the old building. Only the center of each
floor being taken up with the rov. s
of narrow cells, there remains a broad
corridor, running all the way round
and flanked on the right by high walls
with small barred windows. An ob
server from the street glancing up at
the windows might conclude that they
were those of the cells in which pris
oners were confined. As a matter of
fact, the cells have no w indows, only a
grating which looks directly out into
the circular corridor.
At the fourth floor the elevator
stopped and the heavy iron door
swung back.
‘‘This way,” said the keeper, step
ping out and quickly walking along
the corridor. ”He's in ceil No. 456."
A lump rose in Annie's throat. The
place was well ventilated, yet she
thought she would faint from a cho
king feeling of restraint. All along
the corridor to the left were iron
doors painted yellow. In the upper
part of the door were half a dozen
broad slits through which one could
sec what was going on inside.
"Those are the cells," volunteered
l her guide.
Annie shuddered as, mentally, she
I pictured Howard locked up in such a
] dreadful place. She peered through
one of the slits and saw a narrow cell
i about ten feet long by six wide. The
' only furnishings were a folding cot
| with blanket, a wash bowl and lava
tory. Each cell had its occupant, men
and youths of all ages. Some were
reading, some playing cards. Some
were lying asleep on their cots, per
haps dreaming of home, but most of
them leaning dejectedly against the
iron bars wondering when they would
regain their liberty.
(TO BE CONTINUED.)
Plant Breaking Up an Island.
Strength is rot a thing urually con
; netted with maidenhair fern, yet IT
j its roots have not sufficient room they
t break the pot in which the plant
| grows. Blades of grass will force
the curbstones between which they
spring up out of their place, and in a
single night a crop of small mush
rooms have lifted a large stone, in
j deed, plants have been known to
; break the hardest rocks.
The tslnnc of Aldabra. to the north
! west of Madagascar. Is becoming
smaller and smaller through the ac
tion of the mangroves that grow along
the foot of the cliffs. They eat .their
way into the rock in all directions,
and into the gaps thus formed the
waves force their way. in time they
will probably reduce the island to
pieces.
Fable of the Mice.
The Town Mouse and the Country
I Mouse engaged in a friendly riralrr
i to see which could best entertain the
other.
The Town Mouse led off. He Intro
duced the Country Mouse to a great
many people of the right sort, who
graciously lapped up all the cham
pagne he cared to buy—in short, ex
hausted the resources of urban hos
pitality.
“Pretty good!" the Country Mouse
admitted. "But say. you come out to
my place in your car and run as fsst
as you like. I’m Justice of the
Peace."
| Thereupon the Town Mouse had to
I acknowledge that the rustic life held
1 the greater possibilities.—Puck.
WORK OF GEN. BOOTH’S ARMY
Salvationists Give an Impressive Ex
hibit in London, Depicting Scenes
From Life.
London.—Ten thousand people at
tended the demonstration given re
cently by the Salvation Army at the
Albert hall. Old. white haired and
almost blind. Genera! Booth presided
j in person. "Only with my inner sight
have 1 been able to witness these
| transformations and miracles that the
love of God has wrought.” he said
after patiently sitting through the dif
i Cerent scenes that were played before
an attentive and interested audience
First was depicted a night on the
Thames embankment at one of the
army's shelters. Gradually the great
' arena in the hall filled with hundreds
of destitute and homeless men. to
! ' v >; X'. |
Gen. William A. Booth.
whom food and encouragement were
ziven by the officers present, in illus
ration of their nightly task in various
i cities. The same men were seen later
| ausily sorting out great sacks of waste
paper, showing how employment of
, some description was found for even
ihe most unpromising material.
Work among the little ones was
demonstrated by a parade of forty
gray gowned, white capped nurses,
carrying in their arms tiny babies,
j some only a week or two old and
many of them prison born. A crowd
of hungry, ragged children followed,
dancing round an Italian hurdy-gurdy
and fighting and playing with each
: ether. Food and coffee were distrib
uted to the boys and girls, who had
been brought up from the slums that
very afternoon as actual specimens of
; the raw material upon which the army
Is working.
Then came the children of “The
Nest." as the girls' home at Clapton
is called. As the neatly dressed
! brigade. - consisting of about fifty lit
tle girls—all of whom have been res
cued from drunken and brutal parents
—trooped into the hall, where they
danced and iormed themselves into a
zareba. loud applause resounded
throughout the building. A number of
woman officers followed, visiting wom
an prisoners in jai!—realistic demon
strations being given of refractory
cases who refused to go back to their
cells.
The Industrial and land colony at
Hadleigh, Essex, where more than
3,000 acres of land is being farmed
I and intensive garden culture is car
ried on, was represented by a pro
cession of gardeners, beekeepers, shep
herds. poultry and dairy farmers, car
tying poultry or dairy produce, fruits
ar vegetables or the implements of
their labor. The tarm proper carries
more than 1,000 head of horses, cattle,
sheep and lambs and pigs, gf-ows large
luantities of grain and roots and will
soon be busy baymaking and harvest
j ing.
The work of the emigration depart
: .nent was aiso indicated by means of
tableaux and statistics were given
showing that the army now carries on
its social agencies in fifty-six coun
tries and preaches salvation in thirty
• nine languages, while it possesses 954
social institutions, 621 day schools and
■ twelve military and naval homes, in
addition to more than 100.000 officers
af all ranks.
JAIL IS A SURE ENOUGH JUG
3astile at Mansfield, Mo., Needs Only
a Handle to Be the Real
Thing.
Mansfield. Mo.—"Jug" as used to
iescribe the city jail at Mansfield,
scarcely could be considered a word
j of slang. For the Mansfield jail, built
of solid concrete in the proportions of
i huge jug. needs only a handle and
* t'e
The Mansfield “Jug.”
.he change from a door to a neck and
rork to make it a jug in fact. Perhaps
it doesn't matter a great deal, any
■ way, tor the jail isn't often used, and
j t was just as well to put a little
I sense of humor in the structure.
Law O. K.’s Press Camera.
Newport. R. I.—A newspaper photo
grapher has a right to take a picture
of anyone in a public street, accord
ing to a decision by Judge Stearns
in the Superior court. The judge in
structed a jury to return a verdict oi
5400 in favor of a Boston newspapei
photographer who had alleged assault
and personal Injury against Harry P
Walker while the photographer was
taking pictures of a Newport society
wedding.
Coolitvg
as arv Icicle
If you want to think of crisp
winter weather and sparkling frost;
if you want to forget the heat and the
dust and the thirst for real, cool comfort
As sparkling, wholesome and refreshing as a spring
{ house icicle. So next time you’re hot or tired
Sk or thirsty, if you’re anywhere near a place that
wk sells Coca-Cola, go in and give yourself a
“Pm laundered clean with Faultless Starch,”
Said Phoebe to the Con.
"if this is not a parlor car,
\ I guess I won’t get on.”
TREE wii Eadi Kk PiAafc—An laicna:m< Book lor Children
Low round trip fares to
New York, Boston
New England, entire Atlantic Coast and
other Eastern Summer Resorts
via
NewYork&ntral Lines
Lake Shore—Big Four—Michigan Central
Tickets at reduced fares will be on sale daily during
August and September. Many free stop-over priv
ileges, and optional boat trips on Great Lakes,
Ifc- St. Lawrence and Hudson Rivers.
We will be glad to send you full informa
tion as to fares, berth reservations and
routes, and on request will send
copies of our new 1911 summer
booklets and folders.
Address W. B. Jerome
503 La Salle Street Station
_ Chicago, I1L
■B
Fort
Berthold
Indian
I Reservation Is Open 1
I Register at Minot. August 14■ to September 2 I
B Fort Berthold Indian Reservation is open at last to white settle- I
■ menu under the Homestead Laws. Any American citizen who B
§ has not used his homestead birthright or who does not own more B
■ than 160 acres of land, may file. Fortunate winners have the B
■ opportunity of procuring 160 b*o»d acres of North Dakota’s farm- H
■ ine land, from Unde Sam, on long time payment*: prices £1.50 B
■ to £6.00 per set. ■
I 150,000 Acres 1
■ ' ■
m are now open and registration can be made at Minot, North Dakota, B
B on and between August 14 and September a, 1911. Write today for ■
f our free Fort Berthold folder which tells you how, when and where to H
jjn file and the method of drawing. ^B
1 F. C. LEEDY, General Immigration Agent I
1 115 Great Northern Building. Saint Paul. Minnesota I
B B
DAISY FLY KILLER
>hwluniWis.«»
tnra aad kills mil
tin*. Neat, cieaa.
ornamental, coarea
ient. cheap. Lasts all
Htssa Can't spii. or
Up over, will not soil
or injure anything.
Guaranteed efiect
Iws. Of all dealers or
sent prepaid tor 20c.
HAROLD SOIERR
1M De Salk A**.
Rraaklya. I I
-'
the treatment o* Chronic Hem, Bone
Ucera.hcrtrfolownrerm.Yarieoeerirertt.In- 1
t*"**-” t * ,<^'r»-'<c ren rlai i ice re. YY h i t e Serell
fC.MIlh jeg. Freer soree.mll olti miree. Yerr
STSSiWi-Pi »>»il 50 rente. J. P. ALLEN
SILDU1NECO., Dept. A9, St. Paul, Minn.
KODAK FINISHING S3
mratwu. All sopp.ies fur u»e Amateur atrici
fresjx. Send fur ''ataio^ue and tiuiahiuff
ssspaW. *?^Tosa!.p.sja
i
50,000 Men Wanted
in Western Canada
200 Million Bushels
Wheat to be Harvested
Narvsst Help in Great Demand
Reports from the Provinces of
Manitoba, Saskatchewan and Alberta
(Western Canada) indicate one of
the best crops ever raised on the
continent. To harvest this crop will
require at least 50,000 harvesters.
Low Rates Will be Given
on All Canadian Roads
Excursions are run daily and full
particulars will be given on applica
tion to the following authorized Cana
dian Government Agent. The rates
are made to apply to all who wish to
take advantage of them for the pur
pose of inspecting the grain fields of
Western Canada, and the wonderful
opportunities there offered for those
who wish to invest, and also those
who wish to take up actual farm life.
Apply at once to
W.V. BENNETT
Room 4, BoeBldg.,Omaha, Neb.
PARKER’S
HAIR BALSAM
Cleaners and beautifiea the bale.
Promotes a luxuriant growth, t
Mewer Falla to Heatore Oray
Hair to ita Touthful Color.
Cane scalp diseases ft hair tailing.
Fia.aad gllX* at Druggju