The Syracuse Journal, Volume 19, Number 48, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 31 March 1927 — Page 2
Sori Murders to Avenge Mother
Kill* Brother’s Wife While She Is Sitting in B&rßer’s Chair. Lincoln. Neb.t-The day before Fame Mason was shoft by her brother-in-law as she sat in a barber’s chair at Leigh* Neb., she had gone with Frank Mus*»n to Fremont. Neb.. to decorate the graves of relatives. They have some pretty custom* among the gypsy tribes and. tn accordance with one of them, a lighted Christmas tree was placed by Fame Mason and her father-in-law, Frank, over the grave of hist grandchild. Frank Mason s wife was buried nearby about a year ago. The gypsy graves are well kept, some of >them iso beautifully, indeed, that people often drive out to the Ridge cemetery to view them. There, apparently was nothing overt In this visit ofjljhe gypsy chief. Frank Mason, and his daughter-in-law to inspire the wrath of his two sons. Duffy and Ted. It pfobabiy did. however, fan their growing anger into a blase. They resented] the fondness of their •lxty-one : year-<ild father and chief ror bis eighteen-yeair-old daughter-in-law. Fame Schafer Mason was not gypsjyborn. She way married to Duffy Mason. April 17. 1926. at Pierce. Ndb. She had spent the greater part of hjer life on the road. as her parents alre horse traders but not gypsies. Her husband left her a day after the marriage and they had lived together only “st intervals since. Duffy M:i«>n says he did not wish to marry her. ‘ * Resented Intimacy. For all that it is certain he resented the growing.lntimacy between bis father and t£e girl. They had beien in Omaha together some time before the shooting and the chief had bought her some fineries that young girls love. A lot of money he paid for them, too. as much as SIOO. That means the profits of quite a bit of horse trading Chief Mason allowed he had h right to buy some things for his own daughter In law and Ihe had a right to t be In Omaha' at thy same time as Fame. That didn’t square things with his «<>r|s. however. They put h different Interpretation qn hl»‘ gifts to Fame!. So the night after Fame and Frank had placed tfte little lighted Christinas tree over' the hotly of the gypsy child Fame Mason returned to the camp at I .eight Her husband. Dtjffy Mason, said tn her. according to the testimony. “Fprne.* 1 want you to go home. 1 don’t] want to live with y<ju ” Rut Fame j didtj’t go home. Bb* started to prepare supper over jthe camp fire. TJie Masons had been living in a covered wagon despite the zero* weather. Right here!the ghost of the gypsy woman buried near the child, out; at Ridge cemetery enters the story. Ted Mason, who shot Fame a short time later, explains It this way: . “She: come* back to camp all doped up in some niew clothes and starts to get supper .She used a skillet jand some thing* my mother owned. I couldn’t stand to sye that girl touch
Shanghai Concession Made Ready for Defense
fwl <' wf W® > ! 'fr'HKOtoVA Baas® i ~ 1 ' 1,111 11 ' '' " ' " BIJ
ureal Britain ha* been hurrying troop* to Shanghai auu making other preparation* tor u»e deteuae of tae international settlement there. In the Illustration are seen men of a Punjab regiment marching through the city after landing and. below, workmen completing the barbed wire entanglement* around th* foreign concession.
Engines Answer 8 False Alarms to .Same House Minneapolis. Minn.—Roaring through the streets of Minneapolis on a fire truck tn 21 'degree below weather I* no Joke. And making eight trips to the same bouse in one night, only to find each j time that there 186*1 any fire there at all—that's worse yeti. men testified. Eight telephone calls spreading the alarm that a partially constructed boose st 15 West Elm street wga on fire, came Into Arthur Driscoll!, fire department alarm operator. Eight times fire trucks went whixxing to the house. Each time they found the same thing. Workmen had been plastering the house. When they left at night they started a fire in a store termed a salamander, inside the bouse to dry out the plaster and keep It from freezing. Reflection of flames from the salamander and steam from the dryiqp plaster caused eight persons to send In fire alarms.
the things my mother used to touch. And I told her so. And I told her what I thought about her and father. “She threw the things down on the ground, and ordered me out of the wagon. - Ted Mason went up to the town. Duffy Mason Joined him there. Some time later they heard that Fame' had come up to town, and was in the barber shop. Also, that their father was with her. Ready for Hair Cut. „ When the brothers entered the. shop Fame Mason was seated In a chair ready for a hair cut. Frank Mason stood beside her. The tragedy mbved quickly. Holding a revolver about six inches from the back of the girl’s bead. Ted Mason fifed. • As she slumped in the chair Frank Mason caught her ,in his arms and kissed her. She di4d in his arms. The brothers gave themselves up. and their father followed them to the town hall. They were his sons and he was ready to emplojy a lawyer to defend them. They were of his tribe. He was their father and their chief. They hurled back 'at him their accusations. their threats. He did not flinch. Turning to t|be officer who was guarding them be said. “Marshal, give Ted the gun. and see if he’s got nerve enough to finish me." "1 don’t want to ghoot you.’’ replied his son. “If 1 had Wanted to kill you I could have done long ago.’’ Frank Mason was, deeply concerned with the funeral arrangements. He asked the undertaker to have a woman assist In the preparing of the body and he and the un<|ertaker sat up all night with it. “This Is the etale of ethics of our family.” Mason explained. As Fame’s body Was being prepared for removal to Schuyler. Neb., the home of her family. Frank Mason stood beside it and Wept. He bent and kissed the lips of tqe dead woman. He urged that the remains t>e placed in a vault, saying that gypsies never bury their dead except In vaults. The request was not grafted, her own people taking the hotly and interring it In their own churchyard. At the preliminary hearing the father told tearfully bf events which led to the quarrel.. He said he had happened to meet Fame In Omaha and that they registered at a hotel there, but in separate rooms. He spent SIOO on clothes for her. His sons threatened to cut her new coat off her back if they should catch her wearing It. From their cell in the dungeon of Schuyler Jail. Ted! and Duffy Mason talk freely of the quarrel and. the crime. They received word that their father would defend them without any show of emotion. “I did not love my wife." says Duffy. “I was forced to marry her. I left her the next day and went West." Duffy said he had not seen the girl again until about a month before the shooting. He was requested by his brother to come home, so he rejoined the family wagon! He and Ms wife had quarreled for several days and he
SIX IN CANOE IN THE BERING SEA SURVIVE AN ARCTIC GALE
> > Walrus Hunters Recount Thrilling » Tale of Hardship, Peril and Suffering. Sevoonga. St Lawrence Island. » Alaska. —Swept in an open skin 'cam* 1 for 900 miles across the Bering sea i from Siberia to this island, six sur- » vivors of a party of eight walrus t hunters recently recounted a story of » hardship, peril, suffering and tragic disaster. » Their firms and legs frozen, their j eyes distended and swollen and their t scanty clothing In tatters, the six men 1 finally reached the Eskimo village of r Gambell, on the northern part of the i Island, from where the story of their ill-fated battle with the elements has . reached Sevoonga by radta. p Driven by approaching starvation 1 to seek food, the eight men left a village on Little Max bay, Siberia, on
Worker* Find Strange Bird in Old Structure New York. —Wreckers ishing the building on the site for the new building of the New York Athletic club came Upon a strange crippled bird recently which defied identification even by that man of diversified knowledge, the foreman. The bird, perched on a rafter, resembled a pigeon, but had a comb somewhat like a rooster. The bird was taken to the West Forty-seventh police station. A claw and a wing had been injured, the latter having been bound with a strip of adhesive tape. The bird has a dark graybreast. brown feathers at the neck and white specks around the tall.
decided to ask for a , divorce. His father reminded him that gypsies do not seek recourse to courts, but settle their own affairs, he said. “1 would have nothing to do with my wife." Duffy continued. “We talked It over with the county attorney and he advised us to get along If we could. Then I began to notice that my dad was ‘sweet’ on her. He would give her money and they were always, together. I didn’t care. She was a bad woman. but 1 wouldn’t have my father arrested, because we gypsies settle those things ourselves." Ted Mason apparently unworried by his plight, agrees with his brother. “She was worthless and bad.- She promise*! to be awfully good to me if I would get Duffy to marry her." The county attorney characterizes the Mason brothers as “daredevils.’’ Neither can read or ’ write. Duffy asked that some one be allowed to read them newspaper reports of the crime, but was refuse*!. “Dad Is to blame for it all.” says Ted “He never gave us an education.” This was before the preliminary, when told his father would appear against them. The father later changed his mind. About a month before the killing Fame Mason was stabbed in the shoulder by a relative of her husband. She was taken secretly to Schnyler and hidden in a house. During the night Ted and Duffy spirited her away In ti e car and authorities heard no more of her until the killing. Indian Princes Prefer Their Shoes Squeaky Bombay. India.—Squeaky shoes are iu great demand by ruling Indian princes and chiefs, who have hit upon this as a means of impressing their barefooted subjects. The louder the shoes squeak -the higher the price. The idea of wearing lehtlier soles which make their presence known with every stenos the wearer originated by chance some time ago in the state of Junagadh. One of the chiefs of the Chuasama •uni purchased a new pair of shoes, and they creaked everlastingly as he strutted among the natives at festival gatherings. His subjects were more humble than ever. Some of the rajahs, ruling princes and the chiefs of numerous principalities have since taken to squeaking shoes, which are worn only upon ceremonial occasions.
»■ ■■■ - — February 2 to hunt walrus. Venturing farther nut on the Icy sea after they had failed, to find walrus near shore, the party In the frail kayak was caught by the full fury of an arctic gale. After being lashed about oq the waters for several days, the hunters pulled their canoe onto a floating Ice pack. There, suffering, cold and without food and fire, the little band passed the night in the snow. The next morning two of the party went foraging tor food and failed to return They have not since been seen. Five of the starring group finally straggled into Gambell, where the United States bureau of education maintains a school for the Eskimo* After a search, headed by Samuel P Troutman, government teacher a> | Gambril, die sixth member of Um party was found, nearly dead 1
THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL
FIX BAYONETS!
Editor's Note: Thia story Is a cross section of the war. As Captain Thomason is a marine officer, naturally the actual names, dates, and places mentioned will bear a definite relation to marine’ activities In France; there is no Intention, however, to overshadow the rest of the fighting American units. This story is a Marine story, because the author Is only familiar with the combat ex-’ periences of his own men—but every doughboy who saw service in the war will recognize these experiences and encounters as similar to his own. INTRODUCTION —i—. Seven years after the wnr, across the world from France, I met a major of the American general stuff. who was on the Paris-Metz road that last week in May. 1918. and saw the boys going In. “They looked fine, coming in there,” he said. “Tall fellows, healthy and fit-—they looked hard and competent We watched you going in. through those little tired Frenchmen, and we all felt better. We knew something was going to happen—” and we were silent over Chilean wine, in a place on the South Pacific, thinking of those days and those men. ... There is no sight in all' the pageant of war like young, trained men going to battle. The columns look solid and businesslike. Each battalion Is an entity. 1.200 men of one purpose. They go on like a river that flows very deep and strong. Uniforms are drab these days, but there are points of light on the helmets and the bayonets, and light in the quick, steady eyes and the brown young faces, greatly daring. There ls°no singing—veterans know, and they do not sing much —and there Is no excitement at all; they are schooled craftsmen, going up to Impose their will, with the tools of their trade, on another lot of fellows: and there is nothing to make a fuss about. Rattles are not salubrious places, and every file knows, that a great many more are going in than will come out again—but that Is along with the Job. And they have no Illusions about the job There is nothing particularly glori ous about sweaty fellows, laden with killing tools, going along to fight. An< vet—such a column represents a greadeal more than 28.000 Individuals mustered Into a division. All that is behind those men is in that column too: the old battles, long forgotten, that secured our nation—Brandywine and Trenton and Yorktown. San Jacinto and Chapultepee. Gettysburg. Chickamauga. Antietam. E! Caney; scores of skirmishes nearly every year—in which a man can be killed as dead as ever a chap was in the Argonne: traditions of things endured, and things accomMished. such as regiments hand dowt* forever; and the faith of men and The love of women; and that abstract thing called patriotism. which I never heard combat soldiers mention —all this passes Into the forward zone, to the point of contact, where war Is girt with horrors. And common men endure these horrors and overcome them, along with the insistent yearnings of the belly and the reasonable promptings of fear; and In this. I think, is glory. They tell the tale of" an American lady of notable good works, much esteemed by the. French. Who, at the end of June. 1918. visited one of the field - hospitals behind Degoutte’s Sixth French army. Degontte was fighting on the face of the Marne salient and the second American division, then In action around the Bois dp Belleau. northwest of Chateau Thierry, was under his orders. It hap pened that occasional casualties *> the Marine brigade of the Secon American division, wounded towar< the flank where Degoutte’s ownhori ana-blue infantry Joined on. wer. picked up by French stretcher bear ers and evacuated to French hospitals And this lady, looking down a long crowded ward, saw on a pillow a fac* unlike the fiercely whiskered Galli* heads there displayed in rows. '
“Oh." she said, “surely you are an American “No. ma'am." the casualty an swered. “Pm a marine." The men who marched up the Paris Mett road to meet the Boche in that spring of 1918. the Fifth and Sixth regiments of United States marines, were gathered from various places. In the big war companies. 250 strong, you could find every sort of man. from every sort of calling. There were northwesterners with straw-col-ored hair that looked white against their tai.ned skins, and delicately spoken chaps with the stamp of the eastern universities on them. There were large-boned fellows from Pacific eoast lumber camps, and tall, lean southerners who swore amazingly tn gentle, drawling voices. There were husky farmers from the corn-belt, and youngsters who had sprfing. as it were, to arms from the necktie counter. And there were also a number of diverse people who ran curiously to type, with drilled shoulders and a bone-deep sunburn. and a tolerant scorn for nearly everything on earth. Their speech, was flavored with navy words, and words culled from all the folk who live on the seas and the ports where our warships go. In easy hours their talk ran from the Tartar wall beyond Pekin to the southern islands, down under Manila; from Portsmouth Navy yard—New Hampshire and very cold—to obscure bushwhackings in the West Indies, where Cacao chiefs, whimsically sanguinary, barefoot generals “ with names like Charlemagne and Christophe, waged war according to the precepts of the French revolution and the Cult of the Snake. They drank the eau de vie of Haute-Marne, and reminisced on saki and vino, and Bacardi rum—strange drinks in strange cantinas at the far ends of the earth; and they spoke fondly of Milwaukee beer. Rifles were high and holy things to them; they also talked patronizingly of the war, and were concerned about rations They were the Leathernecks, the Old Timers: collected from shins guards
The Wer st Clc DeacriM m « ffe* aaarhoMe Seriea fry m Officer of the Marissa CapL JOHN W. THOMASON, Jr. dhanai hr *• A*fe ha Skate* *U> «■ fa feataHfi *(£ by tb. Bell Syndicate. Inc.) and shore stations all over the earth to form the .Fourth brigade of ma rines. the two rifle regiments, detached from the navy by order of the President for service with the American Expeditionary Forces. They were the old breed of American regular, regarding the service as home and war as an occupation; and they transmitted their temper and character and viewpoint to the high-hearted volunteer mass which .filled the ranks of the Marine brigade. It is a pleasure to record that they found good company in the army. The Second Division (Unite*! StstM Regular was the official designation) was composed of the Ninth and Twenty-thlrtl infantry, two old regiments with names from all of our wars on their battle-flags, the Second regiment of engineers—'and engineers are always good—and the Twelfth. Fifteenth, and Seventeenth field artillery. It was a division distinguished by the quality of dash and animated by an especial pride of service. It carried to a high degree esprit de corps, which some Frenchman has defined as esteeming your own corps and looking down on all the other corps. And although it paid heavily in casualties for the things it did—in five months about 100 per cent — the Second division never lost its professional character. In 1917. when trained soldiers tn the United States were at a, premium, the navy offered a brigade of marines for service in France; it was regarded desirable for marine officers to have experience tn large operations with the army; for it is certain that dose co-operation between the army and the navy is a necessary thing In
Going Over.
these days of far-flung battle lines. The British distress at Gallipoli is a crying witness to this principle. In a navy transport, therefore. United States Ship Henderson, the Fifth regiment of marines embarked for France in June. 1917, with the first armed American forces. The Sixth marines followed. The two regiments constituted the Fourth brigade, and served in the Second division. United States Regular, until the division came home, in August. 1919. About 30,009 marines were sent to France; some 14.000 of these went as replacements to maintain the two regimeiris of the Fourth brigade. A brigade musters some 7.500 officers and men; this brigade took part in some very interesting events. Hereafter I have written of the marines in the war with Germany; how they went up. and what they did there, and how some of them came ut again. Being a marine. I have led to set forth simple tales without >mment. It is unnecessary to write hat I think of mjy own people,: nor ould it be. perhaps, in the best «ste. And I have written of marines In hte war because they are the folks I now about myself. Those battleelds were very large, and a man eidom saw much or very far beyond, is own unit, if he had a job In hand.
Look With Suspicion on Too-Good Youth
Poor little good boy! Nolmmlv believes tn him; everybody distrusts him. All the wise educators and psychologists peer at him suspiciously and solemnly announce that he can't possibly lie approved of. If he is tractable and obedient they shake their heads dolor ■ >usly and prophesy that It won't last; that he’ll do something dreadful later in life to make up for it and he’d much better be getting his allowance of original sin out of his system while he’s young, ingrowing sin being a serious complaint. Well, maybe. But somehow, we can't help wondering if it’s quite as bad as all that We always had a' sneaking idea that the boys and girls who did as they were told and got into no serious mischief grew up to be the dependable, conscientious. Industrious men and women who do the bulk of the world’s work and do it quietly and efficiently, without ringing any bells or blowing any horns to call attention to themselves and that one or two of them Proud Woman Once upon a time there was in Salem a storekeeper who did not like proud people, not even if they were among his customers. He had one patron who was extra proud. She sent her servants to do her shopping. That was when a “hired girl” got $3 a week pay. and a wealthy family kept two or three maids. So proud was this womap that she would not even let her servant carry bundles. She insisted that the storekeeper send them. One morning she ordered a spool of cotton. The storekeeper called his errand boy. told him to get a wheelbarrow. He put the spool of cotton on the wheelbarrow and ordered the boy to deliver it Did it have an effect? It did not.—Salem News.
As a company officer. I always had a job. There is no intent to overlook those very gallant gentlemen, our friends, the army. Their story is our* too. JOHN W. THOMASON. JR. CHAPTER I Attack. Tn the fields near Marlgny marines of the First Battalion of the Fifth found ar. amiable cow. There had been nothing iu the way of rations that .’day; there were no prospects. All httnds took thought and designated a robust Polish corporal as excutioner. He claimed to have been a butcher in a former existence. He was leading the cow decently away from the road . when a long gray car boomed up, halted with the touch of swank that j Headquarters chauffeurs always as- j feet, and disgorged a very" angry colonel. “Lieutenant, what are you doing he yelled. “Sir. you see. the men haven’t had anything to eat. and I thought, sir—we found this cow wanderin’ around ‘ —we couldn't find any owner—we’d like to chip in and buy her —we were goin’ to—” “I see. sir. I see! You were going to kill this cow. the property of some worthy French family. You will bear in mind, lieutenant, that we are in France to protect the lives and prop- ] erty of our allies from the Germans— I Release that animal at once ’ Your rations will be distributed as soon as possible—carry on—” The colonel de- ! parted, and four or five 77s crashed ! into a little wood two hundred yards up the road. There were more shells in the same place “Hi! Brother Boche ! must think there’s a battery over ! there!”—“Well, there ain’t- —” the ma- ■ rines sat down in the wheat and observed the cow. abandoned by a vanished French family. “I was a quartermaster once, the plafion sergeant dreamily. ->4 remember just wbat the ' cuts of beef are. There’d be fine sirloin on that cow-critter, now. . . . Mr. Ashby (another flight of 77s burst ih the wood), if we was to take that cow over an’ tie her in that brush — she oughten to be out here in the open, anyway—might draw fire . . . shell’s liable hit anything, you know, sir—” “Sergeant, you heard what the colonel said. But if you think she’d be safer—l’d suggest volunteers. And by the way. sergeant. I want a piece of tenderloin —the T-bone part— ’’ The cow was duly secured In the wood, men risking their lives thereby. The Boche shelled methodically ! for two hours, and the marines were i reduced to a fearful state of nerves—“ls that dam’ heifer gonna live for- i ever? —" Two of three kilometers away fighting was going on. The lieu- ! tenant, with his glass, picked up far, running figures on the slope of a hill, j You caught a flicker, points of light ' on the gray green „ fields —bayonets. ! Occasional wounded Frenchmen wandered back, weary, bearded men. very dirty. They looked with dull eyes at the Americans —“Tres mauvais. la- ! has! Beaucoup Boche. la—” The ma- ! rines were not especially interested. Their regiment had been a year In France, training. Now they. too. were dirty and tired and very hungry. The war would get along . . . it always, had. s . A week ago. Memorial day. there had been no drills. The Second Division, up from a tour tn the (JiAtVerdun trenches. rested around Bourmont. Rumors of an attack by the First division, at Caritigr.y. fiitered in Uatnignr was a t >wn up toward Montdidier. Notions of geography were the vaguest—but it was in the north, where all the heavy fighting was. It appeared that the Second was going up to relieve the First. . . . “Sure! we’ll relieve ’em. But if they wanted a fight, why didn’t they let us know tn the first place? —We d a-showed - ’em what shocktroops can do!" tTO BE CONTINUED.)
may £ven have become presidents of banks or railroads or something. Probably we’re wrong, bur it’s a comfortable theory, anyway.—Cleveland PlaAl Dealer. Historic Town Harper’s Ferry is a town In West Virginia at the confluence of th* Shenandoah and Potomac and is about 60 miles from Washington. It received its name from Robert Harper, an English millwright, who obtained the grant of this Site in 1748 from Lord Fairfax, the friend and patron of George Washington. The original survey was made by Washington himself and it is said that he personally selected the ferry as the site of a national armory. Harper’s Ferry is famous in American history as the scene of John Brown’s raid. Hobby Is Training Worms Training worms is the hobby of David Masters. London journalist and scientist. Leading his visitors to his garden. Masters would take a blade ot grass and stroke the back of as much of a worm’s body as chanced to be out of its hole in the ground, immediately the worm would emerge from its hiding place and he would stroke its back, which the worm would arch after a few strokes. “You see, even a worm likes a good turn.” Masters tells his friends. Sun’s The phenomenon of the sun setting and then coming into view again for a half minute or more is called “looming’—the coming into sight of objects normally below the horizon—and.,ls owing to the downward bending of rays of light from the distant object by a shallow surface layer of cold hence dense, air.
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