Evening Republican, Volume 22, Number 305, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 20 December 1919 — CARLISLE GOES BACK TO PRISON IN WYOMING. [ARTICLE]
CARLISLE GOES BACK TO PRISON IN WYOMING.
High walls of the Wyoming penitentiary once more shut Bill Carlisle, bandit and train robber, from the world. Early yesterday a Union Pacific train —one of the kind Carlisle was wont to rob so debonairly —paused at Rawlins, Wyo., long enough to discharge the bandit and his guards, and they drove up the long, straight hill from the depot to the prison, exciting scarcely any attention. At the door of the prison Carlisle was met by Warden Brine, from whose custody he had escaped November 15th. “Hello, Bill,” was the warden’s greeting. “Howdy, Cap,” replied the bandit. That was all, and Bill Carlisle became again nothing but a number' and so to be known for the remainder of the life sentence from which he had escaped. Since his capture, a short time ago, Carlisle had been in a hospital at Douglas, recuperating from the bullet wound in his chest inflicted by a sheriff in arresting him.
