Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 26, Number 47, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 16 May 1896 — Page 7

E If

(Copyright, 1896, by Bacheller, Johnson and Bacheller.)

PART

Many of my readers will doubtless remember the robbery of the Jefferson bank In

New

The Jefferson bank was a small institution founded upon the old state bankng laws. Its capital was not large but it had, comparatively speaking, quite a good sized surplus and was considered sound and in good condition. The bank building was a small, old fashioned affair, quite a ways down on the east side, near the river, on a short street, running from Grand to Canal and its business was mostly with the shipping interests in that locality.

The cashier of the bank was Lewis McKeever an old gentleman of Scotch descent and Scotch proclivities. He had been In the concern, man and boy, for forty years and, at the time of the disaster of last November, was looked upon as the very embodiment of financial solidity and honesty. H» was a queer old chap, rather short, and eomewhat bald. He had gray twinkling eyes, a rim of white whiskers under his chin, which was double, and his greatest'girth was at that point where it should have been least, namely at the waist. He was inclined to be near sighted, was somewhat absent minded and was possessed of several very curious traits and harmless eccentricities, but perhaps he had no more than any other old bachelor of fifty-eight or §!xty. "'He had got together a small property, adequate* in every way to his wants, and lived most comfortably in a rented house on West 28th street, between 6th and 7th avenue.'. His family was limited to a niece, Miss Agnes Warren, the daughter of a deceased sister. He was very much attachto her and she, on her part, regarded him as a father. These two and the cook, -or rather maid of all work, Maria Flanag.m, composed the household of the old banker

The baukinp !\uirs were from ten In the morning to fo i:i the afternoon. It was the cashier's custom to

ro

In his Intercourse with the employees, actPd and conversed very strangely. He made some ridiculous remarks concerning the prices of certain stocks and startled them all by talking excitably about some great earthquake which had happened, or •was to happen. He then set the time lock on the safe, fastened the safe and the vault and wn. out with the stranger.

The txt day was Thanksgiving and, it being national holiday, the bank was not open«!. At ten o'clock on the morning of Friday. Nov. 30. Mr. Curtis the bookeeper, the o:'ier minor employees being present, opened the safe and found that the bank had been robbed of currency to the amount of about forty thousand dollars.

The cashier usually came in at ten or fifteen minutes aften ten. The bookkeeper waited for him a half hour, then sent one of the clerks to his house. In due time this messenger returned with the startling information that Mr. McKeever had not been seen at his home, since he left there at threo o'clock on the afternoon of the preceding Wednesday.

The directors and president were immediately called in. and the matter waa without delay put into the hands of the police. Severn! of the ablest of the offlelil detwt* tvea wore detailed upon the case. The missing cashier waa sought in avery direction. and the employees of iche bank and the women of his household were subjected to the most minute cross examination. The result of their lucubrations was what I knew it would be was the only result possible with the facts as they were known: "Find your cashier." Mid they, "and you will .hav* the man who took the forty thousand dollars."

There was. la fact, no other supposition possible. The safe was guarded with a combination aad a time lock, and Mr. McKeever knew the combination and bad, himself, aet the time lock at the closing of tfc* bank on Wednesday afternoon.

For the benefit of those who bare not a time safe lock I will explain briefly the mechanism of this, the greatest of ail hindrances to the operations of the bank breaker.

This time appliance is simply a very sc~ curate aad durable clock placed upon the Inside of the safe door, and to connected with the bolts of the door that the aald bolts can not be drawn aa loot: as the elock la running. In the very act of running down, the «Mttt of the clock lifts a anal! levee wh.,_ free* the bolt, so that, the combination having been worked, they may be shot back and the safe opened. The olook. before the closing of the door, is wooad to nan a certain amber of boars.

Freckle Cxttrthnator

AOBc?piO

^Devilled

4

Lobster

=^^|D SKAATS FOSTER

AuTfxoa

I.

York, In November, 1894. I was

one of the directors of the bank at the time and, in fact, continued to hold that office until tha first of January of the present year when, as the banking records show the concern went Into voluntary liquidation and closed its doors.

The bank paid one hundred cents on the dollar to its depositors, besides a respectable dividend to the shareholders,--and all because of the wonderful shrewdness of one individual. I had a good deal to do with the affair, first and last, so that know what I'm talking about, which is a great advantage over most historians, and I propose to give an account of it, for the purpose of showing the shrewdness of this person and, also, of removing the cloud which rested upon the reputation of a man whom I liked and esteemed.

homo to lunch

at two o'clock, whence he would return al three sometimes a little la'er. He never failed to be present at the closing hour, for he himself always closed and locked the door of the safe and the vault.

On the afternoon of Wednesday, the 28th of Novr.nbcr, 1894, he returned from lunch at about half-past three. He was accompanied by ft granger, a tall dark man, who waited for bln\ patiently outside of the railing, with tfie evident Intention of ac* "ftmpaaylng liim, when ha should leave the bank. It was afterwards found that this man had called on him at his housfi and had eotno with him from there to the office. The old cashier, on this occasion,

#['CLtk)RftNtort'

If wound until the band upon the dial points to the figure 42, the clock will run for 42 hours and it will be 42 hours before the safe can be opened.

On the Wednesday afternoon at four o'clock, when the cashier last closed the safe, he should have wound th9 time lock to run. for 42 hours, as the next day was to be a holiday, and the bank was to re open at ten on the morning of Friday, the 30th.

The bank was entered and robbed at some time during the night of Wednesday, during Thursday, or the night of Thursday, which showed that Mr. McKeever had wound the time lock, not to run forty-two hours, but some shorter period,—say fifteen, twenty-five or thirty hours. This be ing the case, and it also being the fact that no one besides himself knew how long the clock would run, who could have entered the vault and taken the forty thousand dollars but Lewis McKeever?

There are two or three other matters which I have neglected to speak of and which, as they are necessary to a full understanding of the case, I will now mention. The safe from which the money had beeti taken, stood Inside and at the back end of the fireproof vault the door of which last was fastened with an ordinary flat key lock. This lock had not been forced, but had been opened in the regular manner and had been locked again at the departure of the thief. The same was true of the lock of the outer door of the bank. Mr. McKeever, of course, had the keys of the bank building and of the vault in his possession. Here was another fact which did not add to the probability of his innocence.

I have not spoken particularly about the combination of the safe as this was of secondary importance when compared with the difficulty of the t}me lock. It was known by the employees that Mr. McKeever carried in his pocket a memorandum of the six figures of this combination as an

HE LoOivEt) UP WITH A

assistance to his memory on the few occasions when, in the absence of his bookkeeper. he was called on to unlock the Bafe.

The president of the bank and my colleagues upon the board were of the opinion of the police. The cashier, however, had obliged and accommodated me on several occasions, years before, when I needed It. 1 liked him and held out as long as possible against the conclusion to which my associates had so quickly and so unanimously arrived. There was one idea to which I turned as a last resort. McKeever had acted in a very*queer manner and had talked wildly, not to say incoherently, when he was in the office that last afternoon. May not this conduct have been the result of a temporarily disordered intellect? Was he not out of his mind, and consequently not responsible for his actions, when he took it into his head to wind the time lock short of the proper time and rob the bank?

There waa another thought which also struck me forcibly. Was It not a preposterous idea that this prosaic and respected banker should burglarlae his own safe, when he might easily and securely and without fear of detection, at least for years, appropriate this sum or a greater amount by falsifying the books aa many another respectable church going cashier and bank president has done and la doing to-day, under our very noses?

Friday, Saturday and Sunaay passed and atill no signs of the missing cashier. He waa sought in every direction and with all the Ingenuity which the authorities could devise. Telegrams were sent to every part of the country containing details of the robbery and minute descriptions of the criminal, but all to no purpose, tie had disappeared aa completely as if he had been translated to some other planet. AU the newspapers published sensational accounts of the affair and spoke of McKeever aa the last accession to the Canadian colony of bank officials.

It waa Sunday night and I waa speaking of the matter to my friend Wotcot. 'Why don't you try old Benjamin?" he asked. "Old Benjamin! who la he? »oroe private 4w«UT«r' I answered. "No! not exactly a detective, bat an expert in crime a sort of a consulting physician in all those peculiar maladies to which the social body la prediapoaed. I know of several cases, where be succeeded, when the police bad failed absolutely. 1 would never think of potting a matter of this kind into the binds of the police detectives, any way. They are all well enough in findng the perpetrator of some vulgar common place crime, where the motive is evident to all sod where tbe criminal baa Ml nek traces that 1M

WBE

rasa

'K

may read but, in an affair of this kind, they are out of their class. They can put on false beards, feign dronkneness, consort with fellows of the baser sort in low saloons and dives, and comfort themselves generally in the style of Hawkshawe but when ft comes to a case of this kind which requires thought and analysis, they are altogether at fault. I don't blame them very much either. They are brought up ant educated in the old and beaten path, and it a a hard thing for them to get out of the rut" 'i "Then this Benjamin makes it his business to solve just such problems as this one of the bank robbery?" I asked. "No! you can't say that he makes It his business. In the first place he's too lazy to make a business of anything and. In the second place, there really isn't quite enough of it, to keep any one occupied. The old fellow was formerly in the postofflce in that branch of it, which is called the secret service discovering thefts in the mails and all that sort of thing, you know. He has just about enough of an Income to keep him alive, and he supplements his small stipes, by obtaining, now and then, a fee of fifty or a hundred dollars for unravelling some curious and knotty point in regard misaing documents or securities." "I'd like to see him." I exclaimed. "It can't do any harm, anyway, and he may have some idea or suggest something which will throw some light on the subject. You know how much I thought of McKeever and it pains me to find no alternative but the common belief in his guilt."

We talked the

matter

N AIR OF ANNOYANCE. smooth shaven or rather it had been shaven a week before wo saw him. His ears and his nose and his mouth were of generous proportion, and his small sharp eyes were overhung with shaggy reddish brows. As ha sat there, with his head bent over the chess men, and his long arms and flabby hands extended upon the table and curved around the board, he seemed to me to resemble nothing so much as an enormous crab.

He soon finished his game and, swooping the pieces off the table into the box where they belonged, he straightened himself up in his chair and asked us our business.

I introduced myself and my friend and told him in a few words what had brought us there. "Tell me the history of the ease from beginning to end," he said, "and be careful and leave out nothing."

He lay back in his chair, closed his eyes and twirled his thumbs while I detailed, as accurately as I could, the story of the robbery.

When I had finished, he opened his eyes. "What do you want me to do?" he demanded, with no appearance of interest.

I told him that I was a friend of McKeever. the missing cashier that I could not bring myself to believe in his perpetrating such a crime, and that I wanted to sift the matter to the bottom and show, if possible. that he was not the guilty man. "You don't want much,' do you?" he demanded pithily. "But at the aame time, I've seen cases which seemed as plain as this, which disappointed everybody, and turned out exactly contrary to all the appearances. I wish now that you would go over the whole matter again and, if you have forgotten anything in your first account, be sure and remember ft now."

I complied with his request and managed to recollect two or three circumatancea which I had, at first, omitted. He lay back again with closed eyes and beard me out. When I bad finished, be surprised me with the question: "Do you play chess, Mr. Dennisson?" "I have played chess," answered, "but pot lately. I don't get much time for It." "Ton are wrong not to take time. There's nothing like playing cbeaa for sharpening and

developing

TEIiRE HAUTE SATURDAY EVENING MAIL, MAT 16, 1800.

over further, and

agreed to call upon Mr. Benjamin and sub­

mit

the case to him that very night We found him in his rooms on the sixth floor of a dingy tenement on Ninth avenue. He didn't take the trouble to rise, when we knocked, but bade us come in, with a voice which was hoarse and cracked and somewhat querulous. We found the room blue with the smoke of strong tobacco and old Benjamin engaged in the somewhat singular occupation of playing ohess with himself.

He looked up with an air of annoyance and exclaimed hurriedly: "Take a chair, gentlemen, and wait a moment, till I've finished this game."

There was only one chair. My friend ATolcot appropriated it, and I sat down upon a trunk, near the greasy stand upon which the game waa going forward so that I had a good opportunity of examining the appearance and manner of the professional gentleman, whose acumen we were about to test. He was a man of slovenly appearance, with threadbare garments and shiny sleeves a man some where between fifty and sixty years of age of medium size, but very long armed and with broad shoulders and a very large head. His hair was scanty and of a reddish brown, mixed with gray. His forehead was high and wide his face

one's reasoning

powers unless it's playing cbeaa with one's self. Playing cbeaa la tbe nearest like detective work of anything 1 know of. Ton are the man of the law aa* your antagonist ia tbe criminal. Ton maks this move aad be make* this other. Ton pot yourself in bis place aad reason out what move, trader the circumstances, he would be likely to make, so that you know bow be will move before be moves. "You can only win at cbeaa, by getting inside of the other fellow and arguing tbe game oat from bis point of view, from what

you know of his acumen and sagacity and you can only succeed as a detective by putting yourself in the place of the criminal •ad finding out how you would proceed under these or those circumstances. Do I make myself plain "You certainly do, Mr. Benjamin hut, to

[CONTINUED OX SEVENTH PAGE.]

FOE LITTLE FOLKS.

:A HOMEMADE VESUVIUS.!^^

A Simple but Interesting Experiment With Water and Wine,

The specific gravity of wine, as yon know, is less than that of the water, and this knowledge will enable you to make a very pretty experiment, a sort of imitation Mount Vesuvius.

Fill a small flask with red wine and Close the mouth with a oork through

II

which you have made a hole with a redhot wire. Place the flask upright in a flat glass vessel, and around it build a mound of clay or of sand and earth to represent your volcano.

Now pour clear water into the glass vessel until the latter is nearly full, and you will see the red wine begin to come up from the flask in an ever widening thread, just like a column of vapor from a volcano. To start the wine from the flask, it may be necessary to give the water a circular "motion with the hand, but this must be done very gently.

The principle is in the difference in the gravity of the two liquids the wine, being lighter, ascends to the top of the vessel after coming out of the flask.

•jij. How Do You Pronounce Them?

You've all heard the faiiy story about the pretty little girl whose beauty was spoiled wheu she spoke, for out of .her mouth jumped with every word frogs, toads, lizards and all sorts of disagree able things. Do you know there are pretty girls now, and fine, manly looking boys, who are almost as disagreeable when they begin to speak as that girl in the fairy story? It is because they talk carelessly and instead of clear, well spoken words, properly pronounced and grammatically phrased, they let all sorts of slovenly speech slip through their lips. Listen to what one houseold up town is doing to better the |plty English of its members. Each ^-«fbo is detected by another in a slip is fined on a sliding scale cents apiece for the parents to gt/Sht for five blunders in the youngest '|^&ild. The money goes into the fresh rair bank. These are some of the poor tortured words that they have been paid for. They are spelled here as they were pronounced, and it will be a good exercise for you to go over them and see how many of them you would have pronounced in the same way: Sudgest, literachure, becuz, pleg, nooze, srewd, mortle, moddle, heighth, tremenjous, toob, wuz, yella, dooty, wite, hospittle, puple, afterwords, nauzea, verzion,

Cincinnata, Febuary, Mizoura, libry, acrosst, excurzion, awfice, Wawshington, a tall for at all, and 'n', that popular conjunction.—New York Times.

The Dog Ridea a Wheel.

A small boy has been riding about town with a box attached to the front of his bicycle. The box is made in imitation of a bicycle 'baby carrier." In the box sits a small black dog as proud as Lucifer. He looks around disdainfully and sneers at ordinary dogs who cannot ride a bicycle and are compelled to walk.

A dog is the most luxurious creature in the world. He is worse than a cat when he is spoiled. A dog who never thought of other locomotion than his sturdy legs can be turned into a lazy beast who will not stir unless he is in a wheeled conveyanca If you want to spoil a dog, take him in a buggy just once. After that he will not run behind or under it if he can help himself. A dog will get the street car habit also and jump to the platform of a car whenever it stops and ride until he is kicked off. There are several such in town.

The small boy's little black dog barks loudly to be put in the box whenever the boy goes for a ride, and if the boy starts out without him he sulks and will not follow as he did before the boy put the box on his bicycle—Exchange.

Two 1'ictnres.

Tho sun was shining calm and bright, The rw.iTow grass was drop, Tbe and the but to roups

Were rodiiing half asleep And cvrrhead the sparrow sat Ami uj -n tbe bough. Per:.!! the woi i.l

Was

«lcvpy, thetii,

\ST. :i Johnny :-ove the cow. Tho srn was like a flaming beast. 1 he flrld we a lite the Tfcv rri««\ enrry did blai

Aa*. v.-rjrvA-e.tl.is .«: The* *i* •. i. -i to lin imps

*i rt 1 r_u

Aj». iu:-. a Wutiu gone raving mad, 1!i wrw^rivtes* Jk-hr. -Lsnn I St Nicholas.

,, $' Keep the Blood Pure.

,3

The importance of keeping the blood in a pure condition is universally known, and yet there ate very few people who have perfectly pure blood. The taint of scrofula, salt rheum or other foul humor is inherited and transmitted for generations, causing nntoki suffering. We also accumulate poison and germs of disease from the air we breathe, tbe food we eat and tbe water we drink. There is nothing more conclusively proved than the power of Hood's Sarssparilla over all diseases of the blood, ft not only expels every trace of scrofula or salt rheum and drives oat the germs of malaria bat It vitalises and eni Wood.

A Woman's Clnb Story.

A rather good stoiy is going the rounds, according tc fee Boston Transcript, in a certain club •vithin ten miles of the Hub. It is to the effect that a well known I learned professor was written to by the president arid asked if be would lecture before her club on a certain date, the price not being named, whereupon he replied, not without good reason, it is to be feared, that he was sick and tired of being asked to lecture before women's dubs for $10 per afternoon, and that if «he could manage to pay him $26 he Would try to go to her club as desired, Now it happens that this is a veiy large club, with a high fee, and there is considerable money in the treasury. Consequently this president, with a wicked gleam in her handsome eyes, sat down and wrote the learned professor that, as they had not yet paid a lecturer any less than $50 a lecture, they considered themselves especially fortunate in being able to secure his services for $25 and would consider him engaged for the specified date. And then he wished he hadn't 1

The Throat and Shoulders. Fashion is in extremes as regards throat and shoulder decorations. For evening wear the medici collar is often of very pronounced type and elegantly elaborated with mock jewels and sequins, rich lace, points and hand wrought embroideries. Gapes, berthas and fichus are all made with an excessive amount of trimming around the neck and shoulders, and hugo lace and chiffon boas supply in many cases the something and nothing that is needed to distinguish outdoor from indoor dress. The latest display of shoulder capes shows models challenging the powers of the best descriptive writers. Every possible elaboration is bestowed upon them, and frequently as many as six different materials and half as many colors go to the completion of a single small cape, the new models being very much abbreviated, very frilly from throat to lower edge and formed of velvet, lace, chiffon, silk passementerie, embroidered gauze, insertion and ribbon.—New York Post

College Bred Waitresses.

The independence of tho American college girl is a constant source of surprise to foreigners. The fact that a girl who is cultivating her mind is not above exercising her body in the performance of menial duties is something incomprehensible to the aristocrat on the other side. It is possiblo that these very aristocrats have been served to ham and eggB or seme less vulgar food by some ambitious American girl who puts her pride in her pocket until she gets an education that she thinks is worth being proud of. Every summer thr hotels along the St. Lawrence number jxveral young women among their waitresses who are freshmen or sophomores in some neighboring college. The girls look upon the venture as a sort of outing, and though the work is often very arduous and at times humiliating, most of them manage to get a pretty good time out of it and enough money to pay their expenses for the coming term.—Boston journal.

The White Veiled Woman.

The white veiled woman will have to pay for her caprice this summer. It has been discovered that whereas it is possible to wear cheap colored veils with more or less impunity, tho white veil needs to be good to be even tolerable White of course is a generic term, tho species including cream, ecru, butter color, arid even a very light tan. The veils range in price from $1 to $15, which is freely asked for some especial confection with hand wrought lace edges and figures. A curious effect of the milk white veil is that it heightens the fairness of a blond face and adds a becoming tinge of duskiness to an olive complexion. It seems to have the curious quality of bringing out the typical characteristic of a good complexion. The woman who is sallow or whose skin has that lifeless tint possessed by some blonds whose beauty has passed need not hope fcr a magic effect from this veil.—New York Correspondent

When

Company Comes

unexpectedly the housewife is often puzzled as to what to get for dinner. Then time is doubly precious. If when so caught she only lias ai package of jf

NONESUCH

MINCE MEAT

in her pantry *he can, In few minutes, prepare the heat of all desserts—good mince pis. Think

7ofit.

So peeling, chopping, seeding,

picking and mixing. A package of Nonesuch, costing only 10 cut., will make two large pies. Make# perfect Fruit Cake and Fruit Pudding also. Get a package to-day from your grocer. Take no nubAtitute.

Send your addr«w, nimiox thin p»prr, led will mmm)

book, "Mr*. Popkim* Th*ak#gl*iog," by on«ofthenio«t p«paU: faamoroos writer* of thr d«jr. ltrnill-fesk ffntsie. I. T.

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a

TO THE

Big Contentions

1896.

NATIONAL REPUBLICAN CONVENTION,. St. Louis. June 16. NATIONAL DEMOCRATIC CONVENTION.

Chicago. July 7.

NATIONAL EDUCATIONAL ASSOCIAT'N, Buffalo, July 3. Y. P. S. C. E. CONVENTION,

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DAVIS & TURF

ATTORNEYS AT LAW,

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Mr. ft Mrs. Henry Katzsnbacb,

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And Emhalmera, Livery and Hoarding Stable. ed to. Offlo phone 210.

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