w&MmmmmmsB8!ap&&& mb i& jmMmiMmrwww?smm SIS W?'?K 3;: W f ) M.TPWT Tmrww ffiER I ' j JT Lrftt ' i fgyfSjB r i t ' - . Sf HERO 'SHADOWS' WAY FAME ' -- - ' ' - '..! : ...- ' ...-. rf ..'mbwuw , h :nfuMy, OVERNIGHT; itum vim TRAILS AND TRAPS $2,500,000 SUPER-BANDITi f1 ' i land was promoted le sergeant. Ilejthe clerks but one te He en the fleer, i "i.1 f a i ' ' i I went through the Argonne offensive The clerk left standing, with IiIh hnnds Ofhrr Nntnvlniia linnAU ti Great Skill Demanded in "Roping" a Criminal flaying a Lene Hand and in Momen tary Danger of Death, Gorden Mc Carthy Wins Confidence of Robbers, Selving Thefts That Baffled Experts POSING AS 'JIMMY, ' A YEGG, HE WORMS SECRETS FROM BROADWAY HOLD-UP GANG learns of $500,000 Loet Buried en Leng Islatid, Offers te Sell Stelen Securities, Then Notifies Police and 'Gentlemen Bandits ' Are Caught at Rendezvous LL the elements of melodrama, except the wholesale shedding of bleed, en. compressed in the recent experiences of a young overseas veteran who became a detective celebrity overnight. He solved robberies totaling ?2,500,000, included in which was the Jtiking of $1,500,000 in ensh, jewelry and bends from a mail truck en Broadway, New xerK, a aaring coup mm si a mgu-Huwr mur iur automobile banditry in this country. Flaying a lone nana anu in momentary uanger ei a uuuul m me uruin ir. : l.A V.n1r Vie nncerl no n "vetrc" -frntn thn Went, nnil trairtpA frannue m i"c ! .... rv- e -- - " Itlie confidence 01 tnree men wnem u! puucu ums us euiJi;i-iiiBiiv.iui:ii. It was a case of "crossed trails." This keen, cool man-hunter was tracking down the men who stele $70,000 from an American Railway Express Company trucK when tnc trail ureaaenea te eigger game, Gorden T. McCarthy, a special igent of the American Railway Ex press Company, is the young de tective who proves that the thrills of fiction are net foreign te everyday life. At his home in Buffalo this med ern Lcceq modestly related his great Exploit. He did net talk freely. His attitude was that of a man wne had tackled a hard job, who had done it well, and was ready for the next case. McCarthy get his first taste of detective work as an army secret agent, serving at General Pershing's headquarters, and later going te Londen. He worked for a time with .onden's famous Scotland Yard. Te give background te McCarthy's enlevement it is necessary te go back te the night of October 24, last year, when a mail truck rolled along Broadway with $50,000 in Kash and several million dollars', forth of securities. As the truck passed under an arc light at Leenard street a green tour ing car containing three men drove lengside it. Twe of the men leaped out and covered the mail driver with evelvers. In less than a minute Ihcy had taken five pouches of reg Satered mail from the truck, tossed hem into their automobile and sped away. The robbers paid no attention te the ordinary mail and did net take ether registered peuche3, which later were found te contain non-negotiable lecurities. But by chance or fore knowledge, they toel: the sacks with the cash, the jewelry and the bends which could be turned into currency. "CHADOWING," as detectives (em the stalking of crim inals and suspects, is compara tively easy compared te "roping" which demands a high degree of skill in impersonation. By "roping" detectives mean the process of ingratiating them selves with the men they are hunting and then, as supposed confederates, draw out the secrets of some case, big or little. It was by a remarkably clever bit of "roping" that Gorden T. McCarthy, a special agent for the American Railway Express Com pany, solved the mail truck hold up en Breadtvay, Neiv Yerk, one of the most daring and sensa tional robberies ever accomplished in the United States. gang nml trailed some of tlicm through beverul States." Obtains a "Lucky Break"; Meets Dryce, "The Count" McCarthy Ignored a question meant le bring out detnlls of that quest. It was left te the Imagination te picture his cuieful stalking of criminals In the vice districts and the "White Light" belts of vnileus cities. But the "uhadewlng" did net yield a hint regarding the express company robbery. As the trail swung In a circle, McCarthy was once mere In New Yerk, battled for the moment but Btlll plug ging away. Then came what McCurthy modestly describes as a "lucky break." In the underworld the young special agent be came kuewu as ".Jimmy," a yegg or Mife-ciueker who wus icady for any ilctfpviatu job ptbat premised rich loot. "I get an Introduction te 'Count' Chapman," continued McCarthy. That was the "lucky break" be men tioned. He was referring te Gerald Chapman, alias Colwell, alias Edward Scores of Detectives Fail te Get Results This Broadway held-UD. the first rebbeiy of a mail truck in New Yerk f0r manV VOnrS. hrnilcrVlt cVinnla nf police and posteflice inspectors en tha ..-.!! n. . . . " n.ui. i.ui ciues were scant ancl.Bijce, alias "The Count." there were no results. i-i r- .!.... ...i The incident that hrauirht. Mi-. Charles Lambcit. the three men trnined Caithy into the ense ncrurrnrl in , b. McCai thy. an new in the Tombs In Niagara Falls en December 21. when New Yeik under S12."i,l00 ball each for meter bandits held up three express the Federal (irand Jury. Company empleyes and e.scnnnd with "1 mien 1 looked eoeel In Clinnninn." 170,000 in .securities nnd ti-nvnWs.' .McCarthy went mi. "Soen uftcrwnrd checta. I was intinducrd te Andersen, known and Lambert, kuenn i as I as The I'rofetsei' I'lin Docter.' I "They were wary of me for several idnjs. The underworld has Its tests. "1 Was detailed in (lint !,1. " v. Plained McCarthy as he sat en the veranda of his home in nnffnin "T4... I1U unm Tl.n in. U.. . ..- i threimi, rru "'" I niul 1 vns tested for hcicrnl ilnyH be -e-i uv; tuiiiijiiiiv fniiiinvns re questioned. Descriptions were Warned of the cmnWs "") had made n clean lretnwnv nml it . . " icineil nluieMt iinnnii.i, ik... ., """ "trough the ear Lm rctniiliieil. pwrancc of fleck te trace, the ueil. One That was Jn the an- i-nie of the tiaelets ' he bandits ebtnlned. 1( mm ""alii t,r ,. ,1(lr ,.0f,.,t.rau,s u0i,l " t l. I V. 1 h.l(l infnrimitfn.. ..e An...nt . I ii. ......ti hi i-iiuilll f;illlK '"t flere nuprnlliK. .-,.. ,.f V v.. -i. I r,.. ft "III W ,l' lll 1' It was merely a matler of reu- I ineteKl, thou, ,! sturt (he 11Jt 0( i "ie tlnvKs showed ,, Hut,. ltl Fl,b. 'uarr. I I tiaeeil n ill. mil- i.. ci.., ..it., i.'i.i I .1 ' ' ' I" IMUIIU Il-llll'l.' uV i k"''1 "' llllU! "" Intcrnati.mal "nl as a fniKer, altheuch he Is about "cnty vvnti ..i.i i i.,,, , ,,, I "Utieusly !,), Kh,lPri ,, , W MlllJ ncc.l . Kew nothing of the gnng pu,lll! the 'paper' out. 'TllCden Imi1. j i .i.i.. i. ,i I , . "Y. -I I lllllllv I uui wus "' lllltp- I1K. M.,,,1,,, T.'ll,... ..!,.. ' Pn a leuiiiiiii. i ...i i ., . n ..... ,.-., uil'll II lltMJ lull! " K' r tell !"'! iSh lucks !u a department With 111 I iv.tl'll nnil lmirnii It, .11- . '"" " 'B IlltO t if ..K f I..,, " "in un I Ut IIKHill I I n was eiiii n tllC Unim... .. .). , -V.ll,.,, ibc deal. ang'e. 'ou hired thin sin. (II part) III fore I gained the confidence of the three men." McCarthy did net nuy se, but he thus begun what Is known In detective pnr Inure iu. "inplng." the meH difficult ta-k of the sc ret agent. The detective, piclng nt a riimiiial or a friend, must worm himself Inte the confidence of the men he stalk". A false step, n raielcss word, e sus picious action, would shatter In a mo ment the confidence built up rnrfiilly eer a period of many weeks. There Is alwa.ts the chance that a suspected agent will be shot or 'tabbed, pa.ilng with hi life for his during. Three Men "Big Spenders"; All Had "Plenty of Jack" "It was nfier 1 had known 'The fount' and the ethers for a while that I disroveied thej were the nun who, looted the mall truck en II roadway last October," McCarthy wild. "I had been working en the express company angle, but this was a new and ' unexpected complication. 1 showed ne'l astonishment eer the mall robbery. I took It as a mutter of ceur.se, "The three men were big spenders.' Life for them wus mi almost rmitlnunii'i run n I of wild panics' in hotels, road read houses nml cabaret", 1 spent money J he police of Niagara Falls ' freely with them. There were no hiilf- RjMu' li "PIC. I.llter Slie UllH ,llw.lm,.,Tn.l however, ami they took Iier :"' Idle I kept tabs en several way measures with that gang. "Occasionally when they held a part In some big hotel all of us were evening upraised, then was ordered te tie the bands of his comrades. When this was done the robber made the clerk He down beside 'the ethers and bound his hands nnd feet. Then the bandit took n knife from his pocket and began slitting the registered mall snekf, removing what he wanted. He jumped from the train as It drew Inte Kansas City, Me. About a month later Herace T. Wal Wal eon, n former mail cirri:, was shot nnd killed by a Chicago policeman after the robbery of nn Illinois Central train be tween Kankakee and Chicago. The body was identified ns that of the "lone wolf" who robbed the Santa Fc train. Anether Mail Rebber's Buried Loet Recovered- Anether Instance where the proceeds of a mall robbery were burled by the thief occurred in April, 1IL'0, when a net get McCaithy te talk about that mrill messenger In Pan Diege, fnllf.. part of his career. Perhaps he gained was held up nnd robbed of .$(50,000 overseas the knowledge that enabled i worth of registered mail. ' him te establish contact with "the I In forty-eight hours the postal In- uperteri had arrested It. (5. Onrner, who less than a month later was sen- went through the and was shell-shocked. The young soldier's record wns nt geed that be wns recommended for u commission. Then he was transferred from the HOOth Infantry le the army's Bureau of Crlminnl Investigation. It was in that service that he learned te meet emergencies. Ills work brought him Inte many cities nnil towns In Northern and Southern France, and carried blm across the Channel te Eng land. Handled Delicate Cases With Scotland Yard Men In Londen he was assigned te several delicate enses and be get nn "inside view" of Scotland Yard's methods. Many n device of the detective's art he tucked away In bis memory, ready te bring them forth for use when the need arose. But wild horses, apparently, could A v. EJHH Y BBIWBM i' ' i ff-'JMBW f, ilaHHBBiH V' iW ' mHKBm8m&is3b v I1 A HHBBDBs i stwum JIB9HHHBHBHB9HbHBHEm9Bk9b1 ,; HIUHl A"' ,'' ;"HHHI Avll'l Ce,,nt' 1!ut McCarthy calls that H HHHHHHH ; 'yrk Ml i! V I ; HI K"J' 'OVBiP PUir .IBkK a I IKSaBB JZtO .-.- lllt' 1 AlRMlulrllU Jjhw mSSmmtmMmHmKBSSSBt - VI JHHr mnmr in stm WMr XWEMMwW erls sllw that i Other Notorious Bandits Pygmies Besides Mail Gang 'THE old stage coach robbers of the Western plains and Eng land's eighteenth century "gentle- men of the read" shrink te pj0-n wttcs in achievement compared with the highwaymen who looted a mail truck in New Yerk City last October. The truck contained registered parcels mailed by numerous brok erage houses in Wall Street. The mail pouches held $50,000 in cash and $i,000,000 in jewelry, stocks and bends. On the, night of October St a the autetruck moved along Broad Bread tvay it was halted by three ban dits in a green teurning car. The held - up occurred at Leenard street. In less than a minute the bandits hud taken five registered pouches containing $50,000 in cash and $1,500,000 in jewelry, bends and stocks. After the rob bers dashed away in their car a curtain of mystery dropped en the big theft. But behind the curtain worked Gorden T. McCarthy, a special agent of the American Railway Express Company. McCarthy, a young former service man, was working en another case when he came across the mail truck looters. The special agent's account of his experiences en that case is a brilliant chapter in the history of crime detection. gokden t. McCarthy Overseas veteran and former United States Army intelligence agent, who, working en a $70,000 American Express Company robbery, ran te earth the super-highwaymen who held up a mail truck en Broadway, N. Y., and whose robberies are said te have netted them $2,500,000. ' train Ne. 4 left St. Leuis and seen 'afterward halted ut Tower Greve sta sta itlen. Four masked men bearded the train there and menared the crew and I passengers. I When the ' ngain two of under way steed gunrd dress. They had hundreds of geed stories en 'tap and seemed typical men about teiwi with plenty of 'jack' and n knowledge of the geed tilings of life. "Ten or twelve persons sometime made up their parties. The women seemed unawure of the ether side of their lives. 'The Count' could order a meal with the discrimination of a French dandy." After his discovery that the three swaggering hlghwajmen were responsi ble for the mail truck held-up. .Mc Carthy get in touch with the New Yerk detective bureau. The time wns coming for the "grand crash," the springing of the trap. Three detective sergeants, O'Brien, Stcpat and KIley, were assigned te co operate secretly with McCarthy. The young special ngent had dropped hints te bis three "subjects," as men under surveillance arc termed, that he could easily dispose of securities. They took the bait. After some parleying, "the Count" agreed te turn ever $21,000 of the bends obtained In the mall robbery. He offered a 20 per cent commission, which McCarthy tuld he would spilt with a the sophisticated glance of the head I waiter, the four were well-to-de brek ers, or possibly rich clubmen. They get a private dining room and ordered i fitst-class meal. Then the $21,000 In securities were passed ever te McCarthy. Among them wcru Packard Moter and Mexican Pe troleum stork. About $.'1000 worth of the securities had been stolen at Ni agara Falls. This transaction in itself is nn in teresting sidelight en the confidence "Jimmy" had created. Men of the underworld are notoriously nfruld of the "double cress." McCarthy's announced purpose was i mm me securities te Teledo. Thine, according te the story he told Chapman they would be plnred with nn estate, where no rerkening would be made for ten years at least. Instead, the secret ngent turned the securities ever te one of the detec tive sergeants. The three "drcss-sult bandits" were shadowed constantly. A .x. imsseu, and the rendy funds of gang were runnlni im- ti... Count" became uneasy and wanted re sults from "Jimmy." v ijunuay night, July 2, McCarthy. net In 'Prtlnln ivtirt wmilil ntfiifilN nlnnn ir nf flu. !. ..... ', " -""' "" ""' ' "-" " mc lt.n DJ. appointment and ieki triem His pnl bad cashed the so se curlties nnd would have the money en the engraved paper, Learns Much of the Loet Is Buried' en Leng Island During the many chnts that the sup posed "Jimmy" had with the men they mentioned that much of their loot was buried near Lake Itonkenkomn, Leng Island. He dared net aMc them for the exact location of the stolen tieasure. On Sunday, June ''.", the "Count," the "Professer," the "Docter" and MrCuithy met in a New Yerk hotel. Chapman, "The Count," drove up iu his $7f00 motorcar. Te the casuul eje of the doorman and McCarthy met the three men hv appointment and told them his pal had cashed the securities .inu meuici nnve tnc money nana me ionewing day. fenced te twrnty-flve years in the Fed eral penitentiary nt McNeils Island. Wash. He confessed that he had buried the loot in a can? en nenr Del Mar. It was recovered. another rase n robber im- train get the robbers , while their comrades walked through I te the rnnll car. One held revolvers at the heads of the clerks and the ether took five registered pouches te the deer. The bandit then pulled the signal I cord, nnd ns the train slackened upeed he threw the pouches off. The "go "ge abend" signal then wn given, after which the robber cut the cord. All four masked men then leaped from the train. : Three Highwaymen Trapped After a Similar Robbery A few weeks later, when Inspeetm I still were working en the Missouri Pa cific robbery, a Chicago, Burlington and Quinry train was bearded by two rebbeis ns it moved between I'iIe),,, Pacific Tiari'fer and the station at Council Bluffs, la. The robbers forced their way into one of the mail cars mid waited until the train made it regular step r.t a rrnMnp, Ten pouches then were tossed off. A confederate was waiting tlieic 1 nith n motorcar. This confederate 'seli'd and drove off with the of the sacks, while the two held-up men escaped with four ethers. The tenth pouch was recovered. I Lntrr the inspci ters arrested Keith L. Cellins, the driver of the motorcar, who was sentenced te fifteen years in Leavenworth Prison. Fred 11. Poffen Peffen barger nnd Orville Phillips were nr- bnnd the following day "It was Welcome news te 'the Count' and the ethers," resumed McCarthy. "They had about decided te take te the read again. Thev nlnnnrri t 'i-tini.- a jewelry store in Scranton, Pa. raining heavily, but the four men "But when I told them the cash was't0 work wltH pll'Ks "ml r1iovo1s r1ievo1s r1iove1s coming for the naner thev i?ni. m Time seemed te roll back te f JBBaJKftv V.,Ur'JBBJ mey ngrceu te meet the following after after neon en 102d street near Amsterdam avenue. Highwaymen Trapped at Their Rendezvous "I sent n tip te the detectives nnd the postefneo inspectors, and every tiling wns set for the pinch. Andersen, the 'Professer,' left the party te get a cup of coffee. He was met. I later lenrnl set the swashbuckling dajs of sen rovers and their buried ticasiucs. As lie dug Mc Carthy thought of doubloons and pieces of eight he had read about when a boy. After ninety minute of digging they uncovered a be containing S.'OO.flfiO worth of tecuiities. Must of them wne identified ns part of the mall tnuk loot. Others were recognized as stolen from several ether postefflcu robberies. The three men new in the Tombs are net novices te prison life. Police Chapman "stretches" in Llmira and Sing Sing, that Andersen served tinir in Joliet nnd Auburn, nnd Lambert in the Blnck wells Island Penitentiary and Sing Sing. Chapman and Andersen are known te the pollie of Londen. Berlin. I'aris and Keine. Their receids ami the chilled-steel nerve they have displajed time and ag-nn only emphasize the brilliant bit nf work McCarthy did in having the siM cell doers dang en l hem. were at Mount except a by O'Brien, Stcpat nnd Kiley, who Rest of Mail Truck Loet Is Yet te Be Recovered 1 1 lick Postal loot III- I nnbbed him and hustled him te the 100th street station. 1 "Then the detectives hiiriled te the rendezvous. Chnpman and Lambert were waiting for me when the New Yerk detectives walked up and liuil ! then, handcuffed before they realized J what had happened. , "Meanwhile I had gene te an apart- I meat house te nab a friend of the gang (who was wanted as n nmterlnl witness, I I wnnted te be en hand when the three were arrested. The witness tried te escape, however, nml that dela.ved me. "When Chapman, in prison, saw me for the first time after his arrest he said. " 'Jimiule, you're lucky ou weren't bumped off.' " 'Don't be sere nt Jimmle,' O'Brien J told him. "I never get sere at a copper and I don't held nuy grudge ngalnst Jiinmle," Chninnnii renllml i A little later McCarthy ws alone , ,", . ' n,'" "H W. at Buf.ale. but - . ' .- ,1111 lllll II I I I I I II , .1 .1... ...I.lu.. n .. - I-.. ,. mi; i-iiiui' l'(HU,se, Je get a jet) ns cletk with the e- The rest of the mail i Is jet te be receMMisl. spciiers believe one of the InipiNencd 'gang will "break" nnd tell what was I done wlih it. i But f lua r search h new no pan of '.McCarthy's tll(.v, li,. m, ,,v sm,,.( i when (jucstleiicil about it ami nld the postellice Inspectors were line men ant! knew their business. Almest the entlie unrr.Uivr hail been dingged piecemeal from the jeung de- teethe. Tin re Was net even the him of n beast iu his icinarU-. lie did nm mention that rewinds totaling Sl.'.OiM) had been elVcinl for the tin re high, wajnien and Unit he was entitled te all of it. I McCarthy was bem iu Buffalo nnd lives there with his parents. He has a girl a sweetheart it's Ids inrnlmr ' smilingly rcmniked. He at- as he After ninety minutes of digging they uncovered a box containing $500,000 worth of securltlea. with Lambert, the "Docter. "Come clean, Chnrlle, nnd It will help jeu, I told him," said McCurthj. "Lambert 'enme clean' with a full confession, He told where the stuff was bulled. A big dee was the niaiker for the treasure." McCarthy nnd the three detective Mrgvants hurried out te Leng Island and easily located the spot. It wan A press company nnd showed such apti tude nnd Intelligence that he was made a claim agent. Then came the war, and MiCarthj was one of the first eight) -the men te leave Buffalo for Camp Dlx. McCarthy was with one of the lust detachments te leach France. He l. came proficient in handling grenaden Mail Robbery Lesses $2,000,000 in 1920 The three highwajmen at one stieke In the Broadway held-up had carried off loot almost totaling in vnlue the entire lns-ci from robberies for the Postellice Department's preceding fwal J ear. In that pcrUd the chief IVstethYr insp, elm- .it Washington estimated that the total losses-in theft equaled $2,000. 11(10. Barly In 11)21. however, postal lebberies became mere frequent. Among the most notable of these tub licrles were nt Teledo, O., when a tiuii; wus rilled of $l,li(lfl,nO(l f securities, and at Minneapolis, when n lone bandi, lobbed a mail car of $200,000 worth f valuables. Anether i-nhhcr.v, even mere pik-,. tlennl, et cm i cd n few dajs after the Minneapolis held-up. when four bandits with rllles held up the "Hummer," a fast express en the Chicago nnd Alten ' Kailwny, near Quincy, 111, The engineer, threatened with ilenth. i wns forced le uncouple the baggage and mail cars and run them up the track for two miles. The robbers escaped with registered lettvis nnd pnekages valued at S12.".t)00. A STfi.OOO robbery nrcuried en the night of April S. 1020. when train Ne. II en the Same IV Kallread, run ning between Fert Madisen ami K.inas City, was held up by n "lime wolf," as the Inspectors later called him As the trnln was leaving Henrietta rested ns rim lnli1.ne m ..i . . personated a policeman and get aboard long terms in n.lsen. en the night In number Instance 1,,.,-n ,t, i- , " . ... li ana a Mieeters snec.lllv .im,.n.i .1... ..i.i ,-.-...,. ...j.iwi.u int.- lUMUl'lS sis'.i.lNJl) in cash nml so,.m-itieu gene n snort taken fiem n inn! I ,.,..,,.. i - ' i ! V ernen III II .1... i ... revolvers and eidered the diiver te ero- low dollar w On the same day as the Mount Ver Ver eon jobbery masked men held up the Jacksen street postefiice nt Dallus, Te. The rebbei, mortally wounded a 'leik and shot two ether postal eui eui pleves. Thev csiaped with two legis 1 01 I'll pOlli Ill's It wa into tln ntjiiixpliriP of mm. in.il recJes,iies that McCarthy plunged when he took up the trail of the Niagara Falls held-up men. The lecerd he made in that cim. brought him te the front innk of the eouiagceus men who match their wits with criminals In game of desperate haz.anls. a mail wagon In Atlanta et .nine in. 102(1. A driver I transfer clerk were en the vehicle. wagon lllkfnTII.O tllA Vmr.... nll I ' . "- uhii iiuiii-cuien nrcw two ceeu re tne outserts of the city. There both postal emple.vcs were bound and gagged. The IfsSljber tied with till the registered mail'. i The helpless mailmen wen. found an hour laier. Inspectors placed blood bleod bloed h. minis en the robber's tiail. but he get awaj. A clue developed in New Voik Citv . ..... .. ... i . , . . .i i..-w ciis larer, nml a .is i nemns iMtiahue was driver nnd the transfer eI..rk iib.itlfied mm as the supposed pelicemun had hoodwinked them. ii August H, 1020. Missouri Pacific a man known an e ted. The who Uncommon Sense -X QJAVS the jeuih: " of being beni nv The Yeung Man's Buubvar J?y'UiiNBL.Ki-: mte the thought er a desk nil mv life te sit wntcliing the deck te the end of my dajs, because of my dislike for the drudgery of the job." ' The haunting ftnr that one must spend all his dnvi at distasteful worn is in the heart of manv jeuug nun be ginning life. And these i(iiiiiiinii,n ,,Ml ilck-iiate I'ecnine ihief i Icrks M1pei ililniilrills r maiiiigcr. or iiisM llt tiivl pluies Unit gave larger iippertuiillle". TT IS te be regieltcl iIHt h,. mnjeiiiy of men -labercis .unj ,,,ee werker's men - arc laz.v ,iml H ppeituiiilj of T ate lli;V sec about them men win. 1 ., r . .. in nun iiisceurageii, ami wiie have been doing the same thing in the same uiithiuestul wav for tvvcntj or thirty j ears, with little or no promotion, and little laid up ter old age. And the j forget utieilv tli.it because of such men because iln it have and ilofesMeii!iI this ver.v lazinct he liidustiieiis. I uiple rise ceutinunllj fiem the low '-I lio.iliens te the highest, mid Will Mintltme s , , I1M. tlM , J(j () (lniiji . Muiie promotions m,. ,, (,, p,, jt istiue. Seme mi due te iciatliitlhlilp. Iiiit the vast iiiajentv of them illll) cases out of KMMI- ,, , te tl.c fact I Imi the men who ns,. nie willing te Put In the evtia cRiiil and le ,l il, ,slMra thinking that means iiiallfyln' "- j"" iiincr up icmalned uninterested and bent ev-r , XTO Tlttr irr iTm disks ami beiausc their ate tedaj nnd ' N ''""'HI. Intelligent, industrious nlwajs will be buiulieils of theu'sani;. f, .''I""."'" 1114'' e keep our. jet, nil of such men that the waj te pioine- '"'s life If he doesn't want te. i ion nir me lnuiisti bitieiis is (eiuparali TF YOF m.uIiI m, -! histerv of t.ice If lies back through the desk -hound men von would find Dint most of them were as liitle Intcrcsiecl in their work when thev began il as tbej nie tednj. Bi'iMiisc thev vvcri- net inti rested In ir thev wcie content te de just enough of il te held their lobs. Companions and desk-nintes who wrif - - "" is.i.niH Henrietta, , ,...,, ,...- .,, uivi, -uuues wne wrif awakened I Me., tlm bandit bearded It and flourished I '".Ti'. . hlnKu , lMr, . Inieie-t bv the nuibula an auteme revolver. H, forced nil "ttrM. ' ,,","""K b"" n&! tit llftv. Ill is hflll (ivfr thn mm. that lir uiih nt funtiM-.n.n i will be because he lacked the brains nnd Die ambition te go any higher. t "I'Vtiuht. till hj I'uUH, I lBtr Cempanu Weman Narrowly Escapes Death Lifting a bottle of what she thought a simple medicine, mrh je lerdnv, .Mrs, l.ercim Lanit.e. t 121 Kilner' street, "wallowed a iiuimtit.v of ietllnr. Slie a. wakened her bushciid. who kuiiimioheiI lice ei I lie .Ml uiui St Hm. he hei.plta the woman's lifu S"i " M cw;ti W5ek.S 1 I v ifr m fit m m M I nm ' t ct ft W. 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