Evening Republican, Volume 21, Number 262, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 20 November 1917 — Page 3
CLEVEREST CROOKS MAKE MISTAKES
Little details overlooked by criminals often lead to their undoing—Some instances given
SHE most absorbing detective storg ies are based on the proposition M ti’.at a series of truthful events ✓U dovetail together with exact f nicety, while a fabricated story f of similar events must always I have a missing cog, which with f diligent search will be discovered. It is beyond human Ingenuity to construct a false story of a series » of events and not make a mls- ' take. Prosecuting attorneys are always on the watch for these little openings that' explode the false testimony. Nor are there lacking numerous examples of this situation In the daily court grind and in general police work. A few’ days ago a merchant reported to the police that a large shipping case had been opened nearly SSOO in merchandise abstracted and the case nailed shut again. A police detective was detailed to make an investigation of the theft. .He went over the ground with a department r head and at the conclusion of his investigation had learned absolutely nothing. At a loss as to the next move he engaged the head shipping clerk in conversation, the talk being relative to the man’s —— ' The clerk, an affable mechanic, took pride In demonstrating the efficiency of his department. He explained everything about the business and at last demonstrated the method of making boxes. ( This was a new thing to the officer. The boards were placed in position about a form of the dimension the finished box would be and with one movement nearly 100 nails were automatically driven home. —fire box whs" thus made asqulckly as a man could assemble the boards, there being no time lost in the nailing process. The detective looked over the machine that in one operation d r ove all the nails and —got a hunch. Strolling back to the packing case that had been rifled of its contents he made a careful examination of the surface. Then for the first time in his ■experience as a detective he took stock of the fiction detective and brought into play a magnifying glass. The surface of the box Indicated that Instead of the nail-driving process the nails had been driven with a hammer. The magnifying glass disclosed that the hammer marks were made by a badly chipped hammer. Continuing his search the officer eventually found a hammer in the tool chest of a delivery boy’s equipment that made exactly the kind of marks found on the packing case. It only required a few’ hours’ investigation to ascertain that the youth was the thief and that he had been disposing of the goods in a foreign settlement. The discovery of the hammer marks unfolded the crime In a few' hours, while had the usual process been followed the detectives would have had to Investigate the entire force of employees who had access to the basement. The theft and sale had been entirely covered up and It was only the one cog In the wheel that had been missing. Arson Plots Revealed. It is in cases of arson that this theory Is oftenest demonstrated and the prosecuting attorney" must ever be on the alert to detect the point where there is a divergence of the fabricated story. Within recent years there have occurred In a limited district more than 100 fires of more than a suspicious nature. Many of these have been exposed in court and others by some flaw In the construction of the crime. An arsonist planned a fire and was highly successful. He had also concocted an alibi and proved by excellent witnesses that he had left home 24 hours prior to the fire. The district attortey’s • office, while feeling , that the tnaa. wag lying, could hardly refute the testimony of the witnesses produced. It was not until the last day or the trial that a member of the district attorney’s office discovered that on the day the man home by train, owing to a wreck the train had not been sent out over (the. regular route and it was therefore Impossible for the man, to have jaken that train. The prisoner was convicted on this one circumstance. A wQman conducted an unprofitable apartment house venture and planned for more than five months to destroy the property by fire. She placed more than 100 gallons of distillate and gasoline In various vacant rooms In the house. The place was a vertical bomb and had it been fired it would have been blown to pieces with great loss of life. On the night the fife was to have been started -the—woman opened—a—stopcock— in the, furnace room, permitting 40 gallons of distillate to escape Into the room. Then she went to the top floor of the building for the purpose of overturning the (many cans of Inflammable liquids. In the first room she entered, long vacant, the fumes of the gasoline overcame her and she swooned, falling against a table and overturning a telephone. The light on the switchboard alarmed the operator, who, knowing the room to be unoccupied, made an investigation and discovered the plot. The ring and gang of arsonists fired the home of a wealthy fellow-countryman, but in arranging (their plans spilled some of the liquid on tbelr 'clothing. When they struck a match to light the slow fuse that was to have exploded the bomb after their departure they were both horribly burned. The men were given long prison terms, ibut were released on a technicality after solving 'two years of the sentence. A jeweler desired to get a quick return on his insurance and planned < fire. He placed a gasoline bomb in a closet, lighted candle In the mixture and fled to a neighbor!ng city, thereby hoping to establish an alibi. When he opened the front door of his home to leave draught was created and the closet door blew shut. Lack of air extinguished the flame. A policeman witnessed the flight of the jeweler and made an investigation. The fire traj. was discovered nnd an officer went In pursuit of the jeweler. When apprehended the police searched the man and* found on ’him his fire insurance policy. On the envelopes were figures that later turned out to be an invoice of the property a* it stood and a computation of the
insurance, Indicating- that the man ' anticipated a fat profit from the transaction. —— ■ Vu — fl -- Awell-known detective once over- Nt, threw an insurance fraud that was * jpCzßßjjg all but perfect in detail. The fire was to all appearances an accident and there was nothing on the sur- V.tfcrn; face to indicate fraud. NotwithstandIng, the officer went into court to contest the claim for insurance and lo prosecute the insured. The case went slowly along until the defendants put in their claim, mostly for expensive furniture. Then the officer showed his hand. He produced the entire remains of the fire In the form of ash and charred wood and convinced the jury that the fire was not only of an incendiary origin, but that there was nothing of value in the building. The owners of the furniture had described a number of brass beds, elaborate, brass-finished furniture, dressers, wardrobes, trunks, tables, lamps and other metal-bound articles. The detective showed that there was not a trace of metal in the ash —no hinges, knobs or brass bed frames —nothing in fact but several hundred nails, such as come from packing cases. While it was impossible to prove arson, tfie insurance was never paid, as the insured fled the same night. Rancher Robbery Victim. i Only a few weeks ago a Lankershim rancher saved $2,700 and sent a dishonest broker to jail for a long term by breaking up the elaborate story of the accused. The rancher drew the money from a local bank for the purpose of purchasing an additional piece of ground. He went to his home to meet the agent, and while awaiting his arrival worked about a windmill in the yard. Becoming warm with the exertion of tightening up a number of rods and replacing a number of iron pipes the rancher removed his coat and hung it on a board at the well. After a time he went to a nearby building to secure an additional section of pipe. Oh his return TheTOat was oir~tlie grounu, the money missing. The rancher heard the muffled roar of an automobile driven at a high rate of speed and rushing into the road saw a small machine disappearing in a cloud of dust. The rancher believed he recognized the broker’s automobile, and going to a telephone he notified the police and sheriff’s office Of the theft and of his suspicion of the broker. But while waiting to hear from the officers the rancher was surprised to observe the broker coming down the road in an entirely different car than the one he usually rode. The rancher formally welcomed the broker, made a quiet statement of the robbery and then declared that he had recognized the thief. He did not mince words, but openly accused the broker of the theft. While" the men were wrangling a deputy sheriff appeared. The rancher was so positive in his identification of the broker as being the person that had fled that the deputy placed the man under arrest." A search of the broker's safe revealed several sums of currency that totaled a little more thaff" - $2,700. The broker fell back on the plea that there could be no identification of money unless it was marked or unless the numbers on the bills were produced. Nevertheless, after a consultation between the ~ rahcheF ’’deputydistrict attorney a warrant was issued. The money In the broker’s safe was seized, placed in an envelope and marked evidence. At the trial the rancher was unable to prove much of a case on the broker. The machine was one of several million of the same model. He could not swear whether the broker was in the machine, and he acknowledged that he did not have the numbers of the lost currency. Then the broker was placed on the witness stand and endeavored to show that he was at a certain office at the very time of the robbery. Then by relatives he tried to show that the money in his safe had been delivered to him in several sums. At this point the district attorney called on several persons who alleged they had paid him money. In each Instance they declared the money had been drawn either from a bank or had been secured on the day of delivery from another. The district attorney’s representative then arose and walking over to the accused broker, broke the seal on the package of money held as evidence and, holding it in front of the prispner, demanded if there was any identifying mark on the currency. Nonplused for the moment, the man replied there wasnone. Turning to the rancher the --rtuputy asked the same question. ‘‘Yes, there Is a decided mark of identification on every bill,” ,the. man replied. Turning back to the broker the deputy gave him another opportunity to identify the money, and a third time appealed to him to know if there was any way in which he could establish ownership. Remember the rancher had not viewed the currency since It went into the hands of the deputy district attorney. The deputy then called on the rancher,to identify the money. “If the bills in that package are mine the edges Will smeared with red lead. I dropped the roll’ohto a splotch of the red lead while I was working on my windmill jand, after cleaning off us - much of the stuff as I could, I put the money In a coat pocket, letting the damp edges project out so they would dry. That is how this man (points Ing to the prisoner) came to see the money.” The bills were examined and each one was found to have the telltale red mark along the edge. More than that, three witnesses came forward to testify that they had observed traces of red on the broker’s hands on the day of his arrest and the broker declared that he “must have cut * his hand." / He Forgot the 'Rain, i In a prepared story meant to deceive, quite as likely as not the Imposter will overdo his part and thus lead to exposure. A youth with a serious charge banging over his head managed to quite fog the Issue of the case by a cleverly prepared alibi. Two reputable hut mistaken witnesses assisted him. In an effort to find a point on which to seize the district attorney permitted. Or rather.
THE EVENING REPUBLICAN. IND.
insisted, bn a complefe detailed account of the man’s movements on the day in question. The story was glibly told and it was impossible to confuse the witness. Then came the stumble. Among other incidents the prisoner told of visiting a bootblack and explained that in addition to having his boots polished he had received a thorough brushing off all-because it-was an exceedingly dusty day.. The records were produced and these showed that one, of the heavy rains of the season raged not only on the day of the crime, but on the days prior and following. The witnesses were recalled and they also remembered that it was a dusty blowly day. This so confused the prisoner he made several other misstatements which in the end led to his conviction. A ranch hand accused of the wholesale theft of grain from the fields of California ranches declared that he was not in California until after the date of the alleged robbery. He then convicted himself by describing a clump of gum trees In one of the fields. The prosecution was able to show that these trees were cut down two weeks before the robbery and that the accused could not have described the trees, except from personal knowledge. His alibi upset, the unfortunate ranch hand pleaded to turn state’s evidence and implicate what he was pleased to term the ringleaders of an extensive gang of grain thieves. Identify Coin by Perfume. Several weeks ago a woman dfopped her purse, —etrtrtainingTTafge sum of money. A child of tender years picked up the valuable container and started to carry it home. Two men in an oil dlstrlbuting station saw the incident and managed to get the purse from the child, giving him a few pennies. The men hid the money In an oil can, first extracting a few bills for immediate use. The same day the owner of the money made a report to the police and also Instituted a persona’ search. She inquired all along the street in which the loss had occurred, eventually embracing the very child that had found- the money. The little tot immediately pointed out the two men who had taken the purse and the woman made a formal demand for the return of the money. The men denied the theft and by their fierce denial frightened the child. Police officers were summoned, but by this time the child was thoroughly demoralized and refused to klentlfy themen, declaring that he was not now certain to whom he had delivered the purse. The owner of the money, among other things, declared the’bills of currency could be identified, if located, by.their odor. She explained that following her securing the currency from a bank she had purchased a bottle of perfume and that this bottle had been accidentally opened in her purse and the bills saturated with the liquid. The police visited the stores in the neighborhood and learned that one of the suspected men had paid a grocery bill a few hours after the money was supposed to have xome-lnto his possession. —On- examining the bills that had been paid to the grocer they were found to be strongly Impregnated with perfume. Then the officer searched the oil station, sniffing Into every can and box in the place. Within a few moments after the search was instituted one of the officers found the bills secreted in a can of cotton oil waste, the perfume being distinctly discernable in spite of the oil. Minor Matters Trip Crooks. Instances of a similar nature may be found In the police court without number. A thief was convicted recently on a charge of larceny because, although he had memorized the numbers on the case and works of a watch and produced what purported to be a bill of sale, still he did not know’ that in the scroll work on the back of the case were the initials of the owner. J Another criminal was justly convicted and later made a full confession after the police had dispalred of fastening the crime on him. He was - accused ofcutting-open a number of packages in an express office and extracting articles of value, repairing the damage to the package so Jhat there conld be no exposure for several days after the theft. While the trial was in progress, the prosecuting witness picked up a pocket knife, the acknowledged property of the accused, and on a close examination found a red coral bead in the. slot where the knife blade reposed when clasped. One of the beads had stuck to the knife blade and had thus been imbedded in the knife slot. This simple find resulted in the man’s eonvictlon and the return of several thousand dollars of loot to the express company.
NOT REAL BUSTLE
New Dress Feature Not So Startling as Name Indicates. Bulge Obtained by Arrangement of Material in the Skirt la Not for the Stout Woman. * . — t Announcement that the "bustle dress” had again arrived caused quite a furore . There is now every indication that it will have considerable vogue. The public has almost become surfeited with straight-line “chemise” frocks, and the “barrel silhouette” bus also enjoyed • two seasons of life, so that a new silhouette is naturally welcomed. It is well to emphasize, however, that the bustle dress Is becoming only to women at. least of medium height and of slender figure. Worn by a “stout” woman, the bustle dress even in its very moderate form would be grotesque and hopelessly unbecoming, says a fashion writer in the Washington Star. But the side fiqre of the “barrel” skirt, if selected with care, could be worn by any woman, and the same rule applies to the straight-line chemise frock. The bustle dress is really not so startling as first announcements indicated. When made of any of the wool fabrics, it usually consists of two, three or four loops, laid one over the other, like sash ends, gathered and plaited into the waist at the top, so that a slight bulge is effected, which seems larger by contrast with the narrow, straight skirt it is a part of. Or large tucks may be similarly treated, with an apron overskirt or tunic of some sort joining the tucks at either side and continuing around the front of the skirt. When taffeta or satin is used, frequently a long apron overskirt covers the skirt in front, and is sloped and draped at the sides, so that when the
INFORMAL DINNER GOWN
Given soft satins and filmy laces to work with what designer of woman’s clothes can resist draperies and frills? Satin, when It falls in folds, plays with the light.and reveals all the beauty of color, and lace has always some charming story to tell. The most is made of them both in the handsome dinner gown pictured here. In the bodice very sheer black net is posed over white lace and bordered with narrow bands of black paillettes. Over this satin Is wrapped about the figure in a drapery high as one side and terminating in, long- sash ends. These are knotted below the waistline and hang to the bottom of the skirt, weighted with a handsome ornament made of beads. The skirt is gathered at the waist and draped at the sides. It is shorter than the underpettlcoat, which is finished with a frill of lace.
ARE YOU WEARING COLORS?
They Should Be Used as an Emblem, Not as a Dress Accessory, Declares Every patriotic woman ought to wear the red, white and blue as a sign of her patriotism. But she ought to wear the flag as an emblem and a badge and not as a dress adjunct,* declares a writer in the ,New York Sun. Smartly dressed women everywhere have been among the first to adopt the custom of wearing a small-gold enameled or ribbon flag on the coat lapel. Among women of o®ev* society in Washington there is hardly one woman who does not wear the tiny flag. So highly do they regard the use of the colors, 'in fact, that among women who know what is correctlt is even customary to wear the tiny flag* when in the deepest mourning. And in Washington one. frequently sees a woman in her first widow’s weeds wearing the small flag on the lapel of her coat. The small enameled pins are perhaps the neatness of these badges. If' the tiny silk flags are used Instead they should not be pierced by the pin that holds them in place. A tiny bit of silk should be nlached to the back end of the flag anti this should be pierced with the pin. The most popular badge of all ia
two sections meet at the back the rippled edges stand out, giving the desired bustle silhouette. ' A dress of this latter type is shown in the sketch.. It Is not difficult to understand that) a dress such as the one shown would
New "Bustie" Dress.
be rather hopeless on a large figure, and also that fair height is required to carry it well.
the tiny bow of red, white and blue ribbon, and as this is not the actual emblem there is no offense in tying it or in piercing it with a pin.
COLLARS BOTH HIGH AND LOW
Many Shapes and Materials Are Used for These Accessories and Ono May Take Her Choice. Anyone who wants high collars may have them. The designers have seen to that; but where there is one high collar there are a hundred low models. ' Such delightful low collars, toot The roll collar, with deep points in front, is a favorite and newer than any of the many versions of the sailor shape, says a writer in the New York Evening Sun. It is more becoming and suitable for anyone save the young things, too. No woman past her early twenties ought to wear a sailor collar. though many a grandmother does. The popularity of square-cut blouse and frock necks has brought out a host of dainty collars In satin, georgette, organdie, muslin, what you will, shaped for wearing with these square necks, rolling at the back and down the sides, but leaving the neck line across the front uncollared. Sometimes a little tucker or chemisette to match the collar is provided.
FLOWERS TAKE UP NO SPACE
Make Pleasing Addition to Dressing Table When Vases Are Attached to Posts of the Mirror. A pretty little notion that can be very easily carried out is illustrated by the accompanying sketch. Flowers always make a very pleasing addition to the dressing table, but sometimes It is rather difficult to find space for the
Flowers for Dressing Table.
vases containing the flowers. Arranged in the way shown, however, they will occupy no space upon the table, and the vases cannot possibly be upset. Almost any small vase of the nature shown in sketch A can be used for thia purpose. Pieces of prettily colored ribbon should be tightly tied round the neck and again at the base of the vase, leaving loose ends upon one side. The ends can be securely tied in smart little bows round the post of the lookingglass. The vase can then be filled with water, and the flowers prettily arranged in it
A Brush Is Best
B any fabric but satin use i dipped in gasoline or The brush gives much s than a cloth or sponge, ■ “rinig” the. fabric. _
