Newspaper Page Text
gtel - , r ■ “ 11
hHE GEOiaOIAM’S MAGAZINE PAGE
“The Case of Oscar Slater”
By Sir Arthur Conan Doyle
Holmes in Real Life
I T(( n.\Y ’S INSTALLMENT.
KI "HP really damaging alle-
|i| „ damaging that had I myself
the jury and believed It to
■H .. j aid have recorded my ver
flL,.. 1 ag.di.st th- prisoner, and yet this
, j had no substance at all in
fl ■. >s incident alone, there seems
fl ~ lie good ground for a revision
Ha sentence, or a reference of the
fl .. , , 5 ,,me court or committee of ap
fl " . is die extract from the lord-
fl , , speech to which 1 allude:
damaging statement
El ,• lids Ilme he had given his name
f1.,, people in Glasgow as Oscar
fl„ , rl . I)t | December 25th, the day he
■ I as ... gl , back to Cooke's office—his
fl. a „. mid Ids description and all the
flresr ■ : a appeared in the Glasgow papers
flsees that the last thing m the
fliwrl.l that he ought to do, if he studies
H , ~wn safety, is to go back to Cook's
E I .as 1 'scar Slater. He accordingly
R I , r .„ w . : , pack up all his goods and
B l •;> "11 the 25th. So far as we know,
E.l never leaves the house from the time
I f . s»es me paper, until a little after 6
|| 5. when he goes down to the Ueta-
■B tral Suition."
fcd 11,.. r e -lie allegation is clearly made and it
B:l . opi ited later that Oscar Slater's
H wnif was in the paper, and that, subse-
U qnently t" that, be tied. Such a flight
l.'l i till, I dearly lie an admission of guilt.
E| Tnat point is of enormous, even vital
importance.
H m,.: yrt on examination of the dates,
L I vid be found that there is absolutely
I foundation for it. It was not until the
evHriig 1 ' ,lle 25th that even the police
K heard "f the existence of Slater, and it
I wn.- nearly a week later that his name
I appeared in the papers, he being already
■ "lit upon the Atlantic.
E ..i,,; . ,:,i appear upon the 25th was the
EM .s.Tiptioii of the murderer, already
B "With his face shaved clean of
H ij ; ;.ir. etc., Slater at that time having
I ~ iiiarkei mustache. Why should lie take
H sim a description of himself, or why
ill Gniilil h" forbear to carry out a journey
I I which be had already prepared for? The
K ;.i.ihi goes for absolutely nothing when
I examined, and yet if the minds of the
jury were at all befogged as to the dates,
B '.n (Infinite assertion of the lord advo
:, I ran. twice repeated, that Slater’s name
: I had been published before his flight, was
I bound to have a most grave and prej-
■ udlcial effect.
Some of the lord advocate's other state-
I ments are certainly surprising. Thus he
•fl says: "The prisoner is hopelessly unable
fej to produce a single witness who says that
LI he was anywhere else than at the scene
I of the murder that night.” /
K Let us test this assertion. Here is the
■ evidence of Schmalz, the servant, ver-
E| batim. 1 may repeat that this woman
El was under no known obligations to 81a-
SI ter and had just received . notice from
E him. The evidence of the mistress that
si slater dined in the flat at seven on the
Id night of the murder I pass.Ybut I do not
I mderstand why Schmalz's positive cor
£ luhoraiion should be treated by the lord
fl advocate as non existent.
I The prisoner might well be “hopeless”
; if his witnesses were to be treated so.
Could anything be more positive than
this?
Q. “Did he usually come home to
dinner?"
A “Yes, always. Seven o'clock was
the usual hour."
"Was it sometimes nearly eight?”
A "It was my fault. .Mr. Slater
was in.”
Q. "But owing to your fault was it
about eight before it was served?”
A "No. Mr. Slater was in after
seven, and was waiting for dinner.”
seems very definite. The murder
was committed about seven. The mur
i-rer may have regained the strßßt about
ten minutes or quarter past seven. It
nas some distance to Slater’s flat. If he
ad done the murder he could hardly
oave reached it before half-past seven
the earliest. Yet Schmalz says he was
in at seven, and so dees Antoine.
I'he evidence of the woman may be
good or bad, but it is difficult to under
stand how any one could state that the
prisoner was "hopelessly unable to pro-
r~~
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<lir<ctiona for won •* with bo«. Sold everrwhero, 10c. t 2S<
duce. etc." What evidence eould he give,
save that of every one who lived with
him?
hor the rest, the lord-advocate had an
easy task in showing that Slater was
a worthless fellow, that he lived with and
possibly on a woman of easy virtue, that
he had several times changed his name,
and that generally he was an unsatisfac
tory Bohemian. No actual criminal rec
ord was shown against him.
Karly in his speech, the lord-advocate
remarked that he would show later how
Slater may have come to know that Miss
Gilchrist owned the jewels. No further
reference appears to have been made to
the matter, and his promise was there
fore never fulfilled, though it is clearly
of the utmost importance.
iLater. he stated, that from the appear
ance of the wounds, they must have been
done by a small hammer. There is no
“must” in the matter, for it is clear that
many other weapons, a burglar’s jimmy,
for example, would have produced the
same effect.
He then makes the good point that the
prisoner dealt in precious stones, and
could therefore dispose of the proceeds
of such a robbery. The criminal, he
added, was clearly some one who had
no acquaintance with the inside of the
house, and did not know where the jew
els were kept. "That answers to the
prisoner." It also, of course, answers to
practically every man in Scotland. The
lord -advocate then gave a summary of
the evidence as to the man seen by va
rious witnesses in the street. “Gentle
men, if that was the prisoner, how do
you account for his presence there?”
Os course, the whole point lies in the
above phrase.
There was, it must be admitted, a con
sensus of opinion among the witnesses
that the prisoner was the man. But
what was it compared to the consensus of
opinion which wrongfully condemned
Beck to penal servitude?
The counsel laid considerable stress
upon the fact that Mrs. Dindell (one of
the Adams family) had seen a man a few
minutes before the murder, loitering In
the street, and identified him as Slater.
The dress of the man seen in the street
was very different from that given as
the murderer’s. He had a heavy tweed
mixture coat of a brownish hue, and a
brown peaked cap.
The original identification bj‘ Mrs. Lid
dell was conveyed in the words, “One,
slightly," when she w’as asked if any of
a group at,the police station resembled
the man she had seen. Afterward, like
every other female witness, she became
more positive. She declared that she
had the clearest recollection of the man’s
face, and yet refused to commit herself
as to whether he was shaven or mus
tached.
AVe have then the recognitions of Lam
bie, Adams and Barrowman, with their
limitations and developments, which
have been already discussed. Then comes
the question of the so-called "flight” and
the change of name upon the steamer.
Had the prisoner been a man who had
never before changed his name, this in
cident would be more striking. But the
short glimpse we obtain of his previous
life shows several changes of name, and
it has not been suggested that each of
them was the consequence of a crime.
He seems to have been in debt in Glas
gow . and he also appears to have had
reasons for getting away from the pur
suit of an ill-used wife. The lord advo
cate said that the change of name “could
not be explained consistently with inno
cence." That may be true enough, but
the change can surely he explained on
some cause less grave than murder.
A GREAT LIAR.
Finally, after showing very truly that
Slater was a great liar, and that not a
word he said need be believed unless
there were corroboration, the lord advo
cate wound up with the words:
"My submission to you is that this
guilt has been brought fairly home to him:
that no shadow of doubt exists; that there
is no reasonable doubt that he was the
perpetrator of this foul murder.”
The verdict showed that the jury, un
der the spell of the lord advocate’s elo
quence, shared this view, but, viewing it
in colder blood, it is difficult to see upon
what grounds he made so confident an
assertion.
Mr. McClure, who conducted the de
fense. spoke truly when, in opening his
speech, he declared that "he had to fight
a most unfair fight against public preju
dice, roused with a fury I do not remem
ber to have seen in any other case."
Still he fought this fight bravely and
with scrupulous moderation. His appeals
were all to reason and never to emotion.
He showed how clearly the prisoner had
expressed his intention of going to Amer
ica weeks before the murder, and how
every preparation had been made. On
the day after the murder he had told
witnesses that he was going to America,
and had discussed the advantages of
various lines, finally telling one of them
the particular boat in which lie did even
tually travel, curious proceedings for a
fugitive, from justice.
Mr. McClure described the movements
of the prisoner on the night of the mur
der. after the crime had been committed,
showing that he was wearing the very
clothes in which the theory of the pros
ecution made him do the dped, as if
such a deed could be done without leav
ing its traces. He showed incidentally (it
is a small point, but a human one) that
one of the last actions of Slater in Glas
gow was to take great trouble to get an
English £5 note in order to send it as
a Christmas gift to his parents in Ger
many. A man who could do this was
not all bad
Continued in Next Issue.
Health and Beauty the Expression of Thought,
Says Bessie Wynn
M. 'tw'..'- «7/'
lafawEiß /Si]
// \u (■ .’0 ipY*) JwW 1 1 \\
kKI wmv O.
X a aaggpy A
i k\ ' OW7/ .
By Margaret Hubbard Ayer.
TIME was when the beauteous ac
tress giving an interview to the
faithful scribbler assumed one of
her most photographed attitudes and
then announced languidly that she al
ways had her teeth filled with dia
monds, washed her hair in champagne
and her face in rich cream; took sand
and milk baths, etc., and continued as
long as the imagination of her press
agents and her own memory served her.
Fortunately these times have chang
ed, and when I called on Miss Bessie
Wynn at the Broadway theater I was
thankful that only vague memories of
former interviews haunted the dressing
room, and that I was face to face with
a charming example of the new kind of
stage beauty, who is as sensible and
practical in her methods of preserving
her health and good looks as the old
time beauty was absurd In her way, at
least in such methods as she deigned to
make public.
Surrounded by all the pretty frocks
she wears in “The Sun Dodgers,” with
the glittering head-dresses and hats on
her dressing table, and the yards of dia
monds that make up the train of that
beautiful black-and-white frock, form
ing a background to her dark and win
some beauty, sensible Miss Wynn went
back to the first principle of health, the
power of mind over matter.
“I think everybodj- accepts the fact
that our lives are largely the result of
our thought, and that health and beau
ty are the expression of healthful and
beautiful thought, but the great Double
is that few persons are willing to take
the trouble to control and direct heir
minds in a consructive and helpful
way,” announced Miss Wynn, thought
fully.
“Thinking Beauty.’’
“We have heard a great deal about
‘thinking beauty,’ or putting one’s
thoughts on any definite subject: but
how manj- people can do it? Every
body realizes the power of thought, and
Up-to-Date Jokes
Barber —Try a bottle of this prepara
tion, sir. Splendid thing for baldness.
Customer—Perhaps it is, but I’ve got
all the baldness I jvant, thank you.
"Always mind your own business."
said the sage. “It doesn’t pay to get
mixed up in other people’s quarrels."
“Oh, I don’t know!" replied the young
man. "I’m a lawyer,”
Eady—And when did you first be
come acquainted with your husband?
Street Seller—The very first time as I
disagreed with ’im after we was mar
ried, lydy.
Son —Pa, what’s an inscrutable
smile?
Father—lt’s the kind, my son. your
mother had on her face this morning
"when I told her business might keep me
out late tonight.
“Do you understand me now?" thun
dered an angry schoolmaster to an
urchin at whose bead he threw an ink
stand.
•‘l’ve got an inkling of what you
mean,” replied the boy.
Poet —All my life seemed to go into
that poem. 1 was perfectly exhausted
when I had finished writing it.
Our Sporting Editor--! can sympa
thize with you. I was in exactly the
same condition when I had finished
reading it.
A teacher in a local Sunday school
desired to reprove a small boy. "John
nie.” she said, quite solemnly. “I’m
afraid I shall never meet you in the
better land."
Johnnie put on a look of astonish
ment. "Why, teacher,” he asked, "what
ever have you been a-doing of now?"
A lady of advanced age required the
services of a |mg' boy, and advertised:
"Youth « anted."
(tin' of het deurest friends sent tier
by the next post a bottle of Blank's
celebrated wrinkle fillei uml skin tiglit
enei H pot of fair.' bloom. Il Het of
trilse (< etil, c lliixi ii 'in lid ,1 ' di' of
iodlm 1
v\ /f
/im
TMk'V
I
//* X. I
r
II 1
: iHt tl
I i’Sflh ' g
I(W \ ■>< Whll
w iflV ' \ WWSwjRi
• \\ iwAtEfl,
j I v ft i
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Miss Bessie Wynn, with “The Sun
Dodgers,” at the Broadway theater,
New York.
probably each persons has had some
experience in a small way of the power
of the mind when It is directed and
concentrated on one subject by the
force of the will.
“But how many people can focus
their minds on any subject for even a
minute at a time?
“Now, if one really wants to make
any radical changes in one’s way of
thinking, this concentration is abso
lutely necessary, and it can only be ac
complished by a regular mental drill, by
taking hold of the thoughts which you
want to •express and dwelling on them
systematically and regularly, just as
you would exercise your body if you
were taking a. course of physical cul
ture.
"There are two things which are ab
; solutely destructive both to health and
to beauty, and which, to my mind, are
the cause of people’s growing old and
ugly. These two things are worry and
fear.
“Women grow old from worry and
from constant anxie*" and fear. Two
thirds of the time they worry about
things that don’t happen and are afraid
i of accidents or misfortunes which nev
er materialize. But while they
are worrying and Daring these
things, they are using up thought, en
ergy and health. They an creating for
themselves faces and bodies which re
flect the state of worry and fear.
“Women particularly get into the
habit of worrying. It is a thought
habit which makes one grow old and
ugly, and it is a habit which is not nec
essary. Worry and fear lune never
done the slightest bit of good, on the
contrary, they decrease the mental and
physical capacity which one needs tor
dealing w ith trials when they do come.
"Women get into the habit of wor
rying about every little thing, and they
wonder why they grow old, why their
faces are lined and seamed with the
cares which they have anticipated long
11 . J JILL
(Head pains from any cause, excerslvs
brain fan, indigestion, colds, grippe, co.
ryss. the effects of over indulgence, neu*
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v. a v..i,g„„ 1
la fore they had to bear them and w hich
they consequently have borne twice.
“No woman can stay young and pret
ty and attractive while she indulges in
the devastating habits of worry and
fear. But these bad habits can only be
overcome by patient, hard-working
mental drill.
“I have often wondered how people
who believed in the Infinite power of
God and of Good could reconcile them
selves to the state of constant petty
worry in which they allow themselves
to live.
"The woman who is worrying over
:,L endless succession of small Irrita
ti-ns. which is what most women's
worrying consists of. is simply scatter
ing all her force and she is creating
for herself the thought habits which
are destructive to youth and happiness.
An Attitude of Mind.
“Happiness is the greatest factor in
retaining youth and beauty. And hap
piness is an attitude of mind, for we
find it among the. poor as much as
among the rich, showing that it is not
a question of mattrial wealth or ma
terial power.
"Many women are so occupied with
worries, so fearful what the morrow
will bring forth, that they haven’t time
to be happy. You see such unfortunate
people everywhere about you. and orc
wonders w hy such people can not get in
tune with themselves, and create the
beautiful spiritual harmony which they
were intended to give out.
“Please don't set me down as say ing
that it is an easy thing to demonstrate
the power of mind over matter. It
hasn’t been easy for me. and 1 still
have to drill myself daily in overcom
ing destructive and harmful thoughts
and substituting constructive, helpful
and happy ones. I have been aided by
different teachers of mental science and
by' the Circle of Unity, but I know 1 am
on the right path.” concluded Miss
Wynn, and her happy smile, her quiet,
reposeful manner, would have assured
one of that even if she were not a
bright and successful light on the the
atrical firmament.
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< Adt I >
@ The Manicure Lady & ©
T WAS reading in one of the pa
pers today, George, how one of
them club women is getting aft
er the young and pretty girls again,”
said the Manicure Lady. “Wouldn't that
be enough to make me feel tired?”
“I don’t see how it concerns you?”
said the Head Barber. “You ain’t a
club woman.”
“I never said I was,” said the Mani
cure Lady. “I was looking at it from
the other end of it. Now. what are
you grinning about? Oh, I see. Mister
Wisefish, you was taking a sly slam at
my age and appearance. WeH, maybe
I was never no Venice or Orleans or
Joan of Milo, hut I think that I am at
least young and girlish and graceful to
bring a lot of trade Into this barber
shop—fellows that would go where they
could get a good shave if it wasn’t for
me.
"Anyhow, this club woman I was
speaking about when you horned in
with your mean remark was quoted as
saying that most of the young girls
nowadays that thought themselves well
dressed was really uglier sights on the
streets than a. lot of gaudy posters. She
said that there was nothing more lovely
than a lovely girl, and that it was too
bad most of them had to go and get
themselves up like frights.”
“Most of the chickens that goes bj
here looks kind of neat and nifty,"
said the Head Barber. “Maybe the old
club girl isn’t hitting no .300 in the
Lovely League herself. I’ve seen ’em
that way. The wife has some of them
club women at the house once in a
while, and many's the time I've heard
them putting the bee on the young and
lovely maidens that dress ridiculous.
“Os course, now and then one of the
chorus broilers sweeps by here with a
little snore name! on her map than
Mister Hoyle would have used if he
had been her stage manager, but most
of the young and lovely girls 1 see in
New York are young and lovely no
matter w hat kind of rigs they wear.
“I have always figured that a young
INCREASING THE PLEASURES
OF THE TABLE
Do you have variety enough
in the food you serve on your
table? Or is there a sameness
to your meals that becomes
monotonous? Try this change
for one dinner each week. Cut
out all meat and serve in its
place a steaming dish of Faust
Spaghetti. It is tender and finely
flavored —contains all the nour
ishing elements of meat in a
much more easily digested form.
This Spaghetti dinner will make a
pleasant change for the family—
they’ll enjoy it. Write for our Book
of Recipes—we’ll mail you one free.
Y'our grocer sells Faust Spaghetti,
5c and 10c a package.
MAULL BROS.
St. Louis, Mo.
Southern California affords more opportunities than any
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possibilities in a thousand ways. The pioneer work is done.
The chances to follow proven lines are unlimited. The es
sentials afe: Climate, land, water, power, transportation,
and markets. Southern California has them all.
You Will Want To
Know All About This
Marvelous Country
THE NINTH ANNIVERSARY NUMBER OF THE
LOS ANGELES “EXAMINER” will be issued WED
NESDAY. DECEMBER 25, 1912, and will be the greatest
edition of its kind ever published, giving you every possi
ble information about this famous land.
It will tell yon about its farming possibilities, its poul
try. its fruits, its walnuts, its oil production, its beet sugar
industries, its live stock, its cotton,, and, in fact, anything
and everything you may wish to know about Los Angeles
and the marvelous country of which she is the metropolis.
The information will be accurately and entertainingly
set forth, and appropriately illustrated.
The propose opening of the Panama Canal tarn* all tha eyea of too
world on thia region.
This special edition will be mailed to any addrees In the United States
or Mexico for Fifteen Cents per copy.
As the edition is limited, and so as not to disappoint anyone, an early
request with remittance is desirable. Remember that some of your frtenda
may not see this announcement. Use the coupon below and see that they
get a copy.
pLos Xngeles "Examiner,
> Los Angeles, Cal.
Enclosed please findcents, for which you win
$ please send the Ninth Anniversary number of your paper to
the following names. '
Name Street
■; city state ?
Name Street |
< City state
Los Angeles Examir j
LOS ANGELES. CALIFORNIA .■•? /'
By William F. Kirk
and lovely girl doesn’t have to scratch
her head much about her clothes; she
looks young and'lovely, anyhow. All
she needs is a little young and lovely
judgment, and she's good enough for
anybody, club women or just plain
women.”
"I wonder what your wife would
think if she could, hear you going on
like that about young and lovely girls?”
said the Manicure Lady.
"I don’t think she would mind it,”
said the Head Barber. “I am one of
the old school of husbands, the kind
that had to struggle along in the days
when pickings was too hard for them to
lead a double life. I will say for myself
that I have resisted temptation."
“Gee, ain’t that grand!” exclaimed ■
the Manicure Lady. “When I get mar
ried I want a husband like you. Us
girls is so trusting, and so many of
ns get a awakening after we wed.”
"Yes.” said the Head Barber, “and
once in a great while you hear about
one of us boys getting a kick in ttfb 1
shins, too."
Cottolene
at Cake-baking time
It is mighty hard to obtain
uniform results in cake mak
ing—if you use butter or lard
—because both of these prod
ucts vary so in quality.
Cottolene isalways uniform
—always produces good re
sults. With its use, you can i
count on a certain kind of
cake being the same every
time.
Cottolene sells at about
the price of lard, and is so
rich that one-third less is re
quired than
either butter
or lard. f -
Cottolene is never
Bold in
ways in air-tight |
tin pails, which pro
tect it from dirt,
dust and odors. It
is always uniform
and dependable.
THE N. K. FAIRBANK COMPANY
Cottolene good for votes In Constitution's
M. <&. M. Contest.