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About The Ismay Journal (Ismay, Mont.) 1910-1933 | View This Issue
The Ismay Journal (Ismay, Mont.), 30 Aug. 1912, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/sn85053190/1912-08-30/ed-1/seq-3/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
Tlf**^£r-£*« IHI iS&yft&lfr ‘'3 <a«^s& •O' Mv-?'.'-- >&%*£& , #??5$ i 3©' .* <r 4i- , f : m ■{> l t* ft’ - -Si? !? * & ikKi &: l?«, r :i>> :i ’• .. f e .~. 'tf. ;; B y H E N R Y C . T E R R Y ? ,) | E y a t ' ; A v & u e o f l i i g i l ^ a i n g t o H i s f g M | ^ d f fi^ D e t f e c t iv e r S f io w s -s&owl $HoVv|h$ Old A i^ ^ l^ u r S er j W ill (^t,*‘AlwaysHoldsGddd/-- '& •'$ — .*»• .. ^; •?*•.- * v * -*■- ••- ' (Copyright by F. h. Nelson.. T H E G R E A T N E W YO R K TR U N K M Y 8 T E R Y . I'*'** lyfr I.VtV m l^v* ht‘ ■Wv- r IW:- l«t! • Ife ItH^r |?i.> ' I'Sv VERY criminal believes that that he la shrewder than the police. If he saw certain. - detection confronting him crime wqtild be rare. The very cate taken by a mur derer to conceal his tracks often leads to his discovery. Such was the fate of Capt. Edward Unger, whose murder of August BohleB, and the elaborate methods he took to throw the police off the track rank as one of the great est “ trunk mysteries\ this country has produced. In the following fascin ating-parallel Capt. Unger tells of his crime. Inspector Byrnes then tells of his following Btep by step the tracks of the murderer, until the crime was fastened upon him. CAPTAIN UNGER'S STORY. I was a murderer. I had killed my best friend. I pressed my hands over my eyes and tried to shut out from them the horrible truth. Ugh! There was blood on my hands. This then was the end, the end of Capt. Ed ward Unger. No it was not the end. “ Never,” I cried In my agony, “shall it be said that the honorable career of Capt. Edward Unger, the medal of honor man of. Wilson’s Zouaves, who won his spurs on a dozen bloody battle grounds under the old flag has ended like that.” My honorable career. Long since the war I had bartered it for the ilfe of the low dives along the Bowery, for the association of thieves,, for a quandam alliance with the police who learned that when Information was needed of a certain crook or a certain crime, Capt. Edward Unger was the man to seek. And for this reason they did not inquire too close ly into my own dark actions. The man I killed was August Bohles, whom I had known Ultimately for three months. In October, 1886, I was running a little saloon on Eld- ridge street. The business was not good. I advertised for a partner with some money to go into some other business. Bohles answered it. He was a fine looking fellow, a German, who had been in this country several years and had made money in the butcher business In Chicago. I liked him from the first glance. He seemed to reciprocate the feeling. He was at that time in the sausage business, and offered to.put up the money if I would go into a scheme to make sausages of horse meat with him. ’I agreed, and he came to my house to live. I was then living in two rooms on the fifth floor front of 22 Eldridge street with my son Edward, a lad of seventeen. Bohles and I got along very well together, but ,we did not do much in the sausage line, and I was trying to sell my saloon. He had money in the bank, and paid half the household ex penses. Things ran along smoothly with us until the night of Jan. 20, 1887. Bohles had been drinking a lit tle that day. So had I, but neither of us was under the influence of liquor. As we finished supper my son, Edward, went out and left us alone. 1 sat at the table reading. Bohles. lay down on the sofa, and slept. It was a bitter cold night, and the fire got low. Bohles woke up shaking and growling about the cold. I jumped up quickly and began fixing the fire. The stove was near the head of the sofa. I had to bend on my kneeB to stir up the coals with a poker. Bohles said that he had a bad dream. He seemed to be angry. I spoke to him quietly, but he replied with an oath. I rebuked him and kept poking at the fire. He leaned toward me so that his face was close to mine and hissed an insult in my ear. I pushed his head away and he sunk'back on the sofa. I thought that would be the end of it, hut he. jumped up suddenly and caught hold of the poker. He was stronger than I, and took; it from me. He struck at me with it, and at the same time grabbed a carving knife that had cut the food for both of us. I saw that he was not himself by the look on his face, when he came to ward me I retreated to the rear room. Unfortunately there was a hammer on a chair. Mechanically I picked it up. ' I told Bohles he was making a fool of himself, and had better go back to the Bofa. He thrust at me with the knife, and’ I hit him in the head with the hammer.' ~ “• ~ -Suddenly I became possessed of a desire to MU. I could think' o f noth- When I got, near enough Iphi ing else, ■ Pie.— * ,to him again I struck him with all iny HI? strength on the head. The hammer 1 head sank out of sight in his skull. . .l/.The,blood, and brain that, flew,only; If^'added. to- my,' frenzy;. I Btruck him \$f' ’figaihjafter heA'lay dead; on the pofa. $ | ? :-v - & halt hour. $» - .before\^realized that, he 'wasydead and often that I decided to follow its coun- cU. It was getting late. My son was likely to come in at any moment I lifted up the body, put it in the bed room, and covered it with the cot that Bohles had slept on. Then I set to work to destroy all evidences of the murder. I had hardly got through wiping up the blood When the boy came in. I told him Bohles had gone to Chicago and would not come back. How was I to get rid of the body? I thought of burning it up, selling it to medical students, throwing it over board. Then I hit upon what I thought was the best plan, but in my excite ment I overlooked the very things that would have saved me harmless. I thought I was cool, but, in fact, 1 must have been at a white heat. On the day following the murder I went out and bought a Baw and a large rub ber cloth. I drank whisky to steady my nerves. I pulled out the body and laid it on the rubber cloth, which I had spread on the Mtchen floor. The very carving knife which Bohles had intended to stick me with I used to cut off his head. It made me sick at first, but I had a flask of whisky which helped me. I put the head out of sight, as the eyes, which were wide open, made me uneasy. Then the work was easier for me. I used the, knife and saw to cut off the legs and arms. Then I took the body and forced it into Boh les’ trunk. I put the legs and arms on top of the body. The head I carefully wrapped up in old clothes and newspapers, and put in a bureau drawer. I got the room cleaned up late in the afternoon, and went out with the trunk on my back. It was heavy, but I managed to carry it to a liquor store in Grand street, where I arranged to leave it over night Then I went to the room and got the head. I thought as I walked along the streets that everybody was looking at the head. I could hear the voice of Bohles in my ears all the time. I got on the Will iamsburg ferryboat at Grand street, and stood in the cold in the rear of the boat until the middle of the river was reached. Then I dropped the head overboard. I thought I heard a cry as it sank out of sight. When the head was disposed of I felt that the crime could never be discovered. I slept easy at home that night. The next day was Saturday. I got an Italian to help me carry the trunk to Henry Bense’s saloon at 395 Kent avenue, Brooklyn. I got a label mark ed “ John A. Wilson, Baltimore, Md., to be called for,\ and pasted it on the trunk. Then I made arrangements to ship the trunk. I called upon Mr. Siegel in Brooklyn, a friend of Boh les, and told him Bohles had gone to Chicago to live. I had examined ev erything in the trunk, and did not find any thing that would lead to iden tification, in my opinion. I returned to BenBe’s saloon on Sunday, and learned that the trunk had been sent I felt safe then. In the reaction I drank, drank until I could drink no more. There did not appear to be any way In which I could be con nected with the headless body that would be found some day in the ex press office in Baltimore, and I actu ally felt happy. I began to scheme how to get $1,600 out of the bank that was in Bohles’ name. Then with out warning the blow fell. I was ar rested on the charge of murder. INSPECTOR BYRNES' STORY. When the attention of the officials in the Adams Express office in Balti more was directed to the trunk marked “John A. Wilson, Baltimore, Md. To be called for,” by the dis agreeable odor which emanated from it, there was a suspicion that some thing was wrong. The trunk was put in an open room and was kept for three days. No one called for it and the advice of Chief of Police Frye Was asked. The trunk was broken open. The mutilated body of a large-sized man was found in it. There was no head. The legs and arms, which had been cleanly cut off close to the body, were lying on top of the remains, with a lot of bloody paper and clothing around them. The body and frag ments were carefully examined for marks that blight lead to an identifi cation. All that could be found was a crooked little finger on the left hand. Matters-were at a standstill so far as the police investigation was .concerned, when the attention of In spector Byrnes was called to the case. ;“I was about going homq,” said In spector Byrnes, “ on a Wednesday aft ernoon. when I received a telegram from. Chief Frye of -Baltimore. A headless body! That was certainly a novelty, arid-1: .becamegreatly’ inter- 'eited., ,1 telegraphed for further in formation;. In-the answer were three important, -iteiris. The’ first was the adcL-ess of a butcher-named. Siegel, in Throop avenue,-^Brooklyn; the sec ond, a labeLof [Westcott’s Express,, in •this-city, .Md£third,:ia label* of The London and feMMCh’ester/,Plate GlaBS Vlnmnorcirr .72'-fill A VK'iW/irTnf nr' ntrpot.' .Company; and)75'iWooster street.' iWOuldSappear in the papers .. here on ^Thursday., morning,' and if it . should ;meet-;the: eye. of‘the murderer/iif-case heihad pot left the city, lie would 'do ji^at^ohce. It was a^casdof jump arid- ;‘get;:there. ‘I explained^the situation {to^Detectiyes1* Yon Gerichten, Titus? r’andf McUaughlin, and started them separately on the Siegel, the glass .company and the Westcott Express \clues. “The Siegel clue fell flat; the glass ^'company threw a little light ori the -mystery, but the Westcott Express -proved to be the turning point in the case. It was learned from the Brook lyn office of the Westcott Express that a trunk had been sent to Baltimore from Sense’s liquor store, at 395 Kent avenue, several days before. Bense told Detective McLaughlin that a man, a perfect stranger to him, had brought the trunk to his place with an Italian. Bense remembered the names of Wil son and Baltimore. \I made up my mind from the fact that the trunk had been taken to Brooklyn from this city. That would be a guilty man’s natural device to hide a crime. “I reasoned that the trunk had been taken probably from the east side, and from some house near the Grand street ferry. “Upon this supposition I sent out a lot of men to go through the records of express companies to see if any of the expressmen remembered a trunk like the one Bense had seen. Good luck attended this effort, and it so happened that at the very first place —it was Dodd’s express—at which De tective McLaughlin called he learned that a similar trunk had been taken from 546 West 40th street to 22 Ridge street. “At the 40th street house it was learned that the trunk belonged to August Bohles, a butcher, and the receipt for the trunk in Ridge Btreet was signed by Edward Unger. “I put a watch on the house at 22 Ridge street. It was learned from the neighbors that Unger—Capt Un ger he was called—still lived there, but the man named Bohles had gone to Chicago. The first real connec tion of one of the men with the trunk was made when the detectives heard the description of Capt. Unger. It was the same as that given by Bense. “The men had only a short time to wait when Capt Unger came to the house. He was arrested, and was brought at once to police headquar ters. He laughed heartily when ac cused of murdering Bohles. He said that Bohles had gone to Chicago, and he could bring him to this city with a telegram. “Unger lived on the fifth floor, front, and in tho room was found abundant evidence of butchery of some sort The carpet was stained with blood, and a hammer, saw and knife had particles of blood on them near the handles. There was a great blood stain on a sofa. Bense was brought from Brooklyn, and positive ly identified Capt. Unger as t]*e man who had brought the trunk to his place. I learned from Mrs. Siegel the important fact that Bohles’ little fin ger on the left hand was crooked. “ Unger had an iron will and more nerve than any man I ever met under similar circumstances. * “I placed the saw, knife and ham mer on my table, and I sent for the captain. He gave a careless glance at the tools and sat down. I talked with him, not about the crime, and at the same time kept handling the tools. He did not say anything abov't them nor did I. “The trunk with the remains had arrived from Baltimore, and I ha*’ them and the bloody sofa that waB iu Unger’s room brought to police head quarters. I let the captain stay in the dark for awhile, and then I had the trunk and sofa placed in the corridor near his cell door. “After a while I went down to the cells and stood in front of Unger’s door. As I said nothing, thiB made him uneasy. After fifteen or twenty minutes I said: “ ‘Come out here, Cap. I want to Bee you a moment.’ “ ‘All right,’ he responded. \He stepped slowly out of the cell, and ap he passed me, I slapped him on the hack. He turned quickly, and there I Btood, pointing at the open trunk, with its horrible contents in full view. Unger jumped, put his hands over his eyes and staggered backward. I helpad him gently to the bloody sofa. He sat down without looking. I did not jiay anything, nei ther did he. I cobid see him pull himself together to face me. As he took his hands from his eyes he saw the blood spot on the sofa. He jumped to his feet, and I motioned for a de tective to lead him to the cell. Then I said: ‘Now, Cap, any time that you wish to talk to me I will be in my office.’ “He gave me a glance which re minded me of a beast at bay, but I saw that his spirit was broken. It was only a little while when Detective Hickey came to the office with the in formation that Unger wanted to see me. I fixed the bloody tools on the table, and alongside o f them a pack age of labels 'of the glass company in Wooster street, which had been found' in his room. ‘ “The captain looked defiant when he came' in, but it was only the fast bluff. \ \ .VI' “ ‘Well, inspector, I. can’t beat this game., What do you want to know?’ “ *Who killed Bohles?’ I asked quickly. ' - ■ V‘I did,’ he replied,1 and he acted i as i f a ‘great load had -bhen^lif tedfftom-, his .mind. . ‘Th€^/]he|^id^ihe{8ixn^of:- the butchery,:, and :claMedi^al'-:lt^was done in/'self-defens^^^^ to. Sing jSing|fqrir^ - The beauty of the skin depends to a great extent upon the health of the sebaceous glands. These are little underlying ducts supplying the skin with-the grease needed, and if their secretions are suppressed, the pores are Btopped up and some complexion defect-'or other will result. One .must keep the pores of the skin unhampered of old oil and dead cuti cle to have a good complexion, and when they seem* inactive there Is noth ing to do but to resort to massage and very thorough bathing with hot water .and a good soap. Cold water is useless against the deep seated dust and grease of the skin, even with the aid of soap. Moreover, it tends to contract the pores, making it still harder, for them to yield their tents. * So as a preparation for help ful massage, which is meant further to clear the stopped-up pores, the face bath must not only be hot but very complete. There is much contention that soap is injurious to the skin, but this is by no means true. The influences of Boap are tonic, antiseptic and clean sing, so that a soap must really be very bad to hurt the skin—contain, in fact, th'e strong alkali which scorches and Irritates. A good face bath with very h\ot water and a bland soap leaves S l smooth skin like marble, and with repeated and systematic bathing the rqttgh one is much improved. Work $bick soap suds or a soap jelly well ittto the pores, and rinse with repeated waters. Dab it partly dry with a Boft old towel, and then sit down with a pot of good cold cream, or a little almond oil, and proceed with the massage. Begin by massaging the muscles of the cheek just in front of the upper half of the ear, using the three first fingers of both hands. Rub outward and upward in a circular manner, with a firm yet gentle fcuch, covering a spot about the size of a silver dollar. If the muscles are correctly located, the upward motion will pull the skin taut about the corners of the mouth, rubbing out the drooping line at the side of the nose. If the face is heav ily lined here, massage will in time so strengthen the muscles that the furrowsliwill be much softer, or disap pear entirely. Next massage the temple muscles in the same way. These are still more easily detected by the even greater influence they exert on the lines each side of the nose The reg ular and systematic massage of them will prevent the formation of crow’s feet, those fine lines at the corners of the eyeB which laughing faces with thin skin take on so often at an early age. Some ung’uent or other is undoubt edly required with massage, for oth erwise the cuticle would be much Ir ritated, and the benefits of any face cream are increased tenfold if it is used with massage. For the face con stantly made-up with dosmetics, rouge and a fancy powder o* liquid white, it is also necessary to cleanse the skin first with the grease before using wa ter upon it, for otherwise the bath will only force the makeup down into the pores. If the face skin is very delicate, do not dash cold water upon it after the hot bath, as this interferes with the circulation and is considered harm ful by all the beauty people. Where tire skin is very inactive two face steams could be taken a week, the massage immediately following these. An astringent of a harmless and invigorating sort Is often needed after massage, especially if the pores are inclined to be big, and all authorities agree that a first-class cologne is the best for this. A formula for farina cologne, which Is much used in this way, follows below: Oil of bergamot ...........................1 ounce OH of ncroll ............................ ,.6 drams Oil of ros 9 mary .........................S drams OH of lemon .............................. 3 drams .Oil of cloves ..................................1 dram Oil of lavender.... .................................. 1 dram Rectified spirit .................. 1 gallon The druggist would put up this for mula more\ perfectly than it could be done at home, or else supply a bottle of German cologne, which would be very nearly as good. r 'X ,rt>T 4* 5,Vf C m From Brown Eyes. Is it proper for me to go with a young man who is engaged to another? Am going with a young man whom 1 like very much; how am I to find out whether he cares for me? He has told me that he loved me, but I don’i know whether to believe it or not. Haven’t been going with him very long. Is it all right to go driving a1 night? Suggest something for a “ gyp sy tea;” also something odd to enter tain about six girls and boys. How should the invitations be written? Am going to have a visitor for a week. What must I do to entertain her all the time. I live in a small place where there are zrsent.H. i iil \ neiBreW V.sltoir.Uj v<- tS Point -to' Hidden Kidney Trouble. H a y e you' a lame back, ach ing d a y an d night? Do you feel a sharp pain after bending over? When the kid neys seem sore“” and the action irregular, u s e Doan’s Kidneyr Pills, which have cured thousands. A Colorado Case John T. Scantling, Trinidad, Colo., says: **I was confined to bed so help- leas I had to he fed. Nothing helped me until I used Doan’s Kidney PUls, and they did me a world of good. I have never missed a day’s work since.” Get Doan's at any Drug Store, 50c. a Box D o a n ’s K g ? S r a very few amuse- BROWN EYES. Their Feeling. “Well, old sport, how do you feel? I’ve Just eaten a bowl of ox-tail soup and feel bully.” “I’ve just eaten a plate of hash and feel like everything.”—New Orleans TImes-Democrat. I should not think you would want to accept attention from a man who was engaged; it does not look right and I would not do it. I would not he in haste to believe all a man told me if I had known him but & short time; better go slow and let time settle the question of how much he thinks of you. I do not believe in girls going driving alone at night with out a chaperon. I do not know what you mean by “ gypsy” tea, suppose you write and tell me about one for the benefit of the other readerk of -the column. For six girls and hoys it is not necessary to write the invita tions unless for a formal dinner party. Just ask them over the telephone or when you see them. Summer enter taining Is always very informal. Do you think your visitor will wish to be amused “all the time?” I should have my friends meet her at a porch party in the afternoon or an evening card party or something like that. A Variety of Questions. Have read and enjoyed your answers in the paper so much, have decided to ask you to please answer a few ques tions for me. Which color eyes and hair are counted the stronger, and which are most generally liked by the majority of people? How often Bhould a young man call upon a young lady during the week, and how late should he remain? Would it look well for a girl to tell her friend of all her former love af fairs when he seems very anxious to hear about them and insists that he should know? Do you think a girl who is seven teen too young to have young men callers? If ^rou have not been introduced to a young man is it proper to speak to him when he always speaks? Hope you will not mind helping me out in this. I thank you very much. “DD3E GIRLIE.\ Scientifically I do not know whether it haB ever been proven which are the stronger, light or dark haired people. I think dark hair and eyes are greatly admired and I have heard much In favor of the golden blond, although that type is said to lose its youth sooner than the darker haired, but I have seen it work both ways. It all depends upon how deeply Inter ested a young man I b . I should say that two or three times a week is often enough and ten-thirty late as he should stay on ordinary occasions. A girl must do as she thinkB wiso about her former love affairs. I do not think many affairs are to a girl’s credit; I mean serious ones. Seven teen Is plenty young enough for a girl to he In society. It all depends upon who the young man is whether you should speak to him. There is gen erally a way for a man to meet a girl by being properly introduced. I do not mind helping you out in the least. FACE A SIGHT WITH TETTER Moberly, Mo.—“My trouble began with a small pimple on the left side of my face and It spread all over my face and to my neck. It would be scar let red when I got warm. My face was a sight. It looked very unpleas ant, and it felt uncomfortable. My face was something awful; it just kept me in agony all the time. Some said It was tetter, and some said It was ‘ that awful eczema, but I rather think It Was tetter. I had been troubled with it for about two years and tried many remedies, but got no relief until r used Outicura Soap and Ointment. “When I would wash my face with che Cuticura Soap and apply the Cutl- oura Ointment it would cool my skin and draw great big drops of matter out of the skin. You would think I was sweating; it would run down my face just as though I had washed it. It itched and smarted and I suffered in the day time most I used the Cut!* cura Soap and Cuticura Ointment for a month and I was cured of I t ” (Sign ed) Mrs. J. Brooksher, April 15, 1912. Cuticura Soap and Ointment sold throughout the world. Sample of each free, with 32-p. Skin Book. AddresB post-card \Cuticura Dept I* Boston.** A Year Hence. Miss Dlnnlngham—Mamma, do you think papa knows Harold is going to call for me in his aeroplane? Mamma— O, I think so, dear. He’s been hanging around the skylight with a club all the afternoon. Important to Mothers Examine carefully every bottle of CASTORIA, a safe and sure remedy for infants and children, and see that It Bears the Signature of i In Use For Over SO'Years. Children Cry for Fletcher’s Caatoria Too 8leepy Physician—What can I do for you? Patient—My foot gets asleep often and I want something to give it in somnia. Paxtine Antiseptic sprayed Into the nasal passages 1 b a surprisingly suc cessful remedy for catarrh. At drug gists, 25c a box or sent postpaid on re ceipt of price by The Paxton Toilet Co., Boston, Mass. A Puzzle. “Birds of a feather flock together.” \How about a rooster and a crow7” C o le’s C o r b o lisn lve Relleres and cures itching, torturing die- oases of the Bkln and mucous membrane. A superior Pile Cure. 25 and 50 cents, by druggists. For free sample write to J. W. Cole <fc Co., Black Elver Falls, Wls. A smooth man is liable to be slip pery. Arranging the Veranda. Do not\ crowd the veranda to over flowing with oddB and ends, or all Its comforts and charm will be dis pelled. Arrangements should always he perfected tQ make it desirable as an outdoor -vliving-room, well lighted^ at night.nnd suitable for breakfast, luncheon,_tea. and even dinner. And .if’in a vicinity where mosquitoes and flies awarm$screens must completely inclose the v porch space. /i^JD*>k..8!Ippers. At the^prese^tjinoment slippers .of 'the palen^te^arqjiot considered good BtyIes,lh^|£^ 5 amd;rfo.otwear In richer Bhades blue and violet comhinedtwithl-fgold ^ and silver are “ ■’-*■'* ---------- those . ..... ^ can ■ ittie^ ^ p p ^ '^ ito jth e rich Ori- ’.e,ffe^f)ritroauc'ed by the eve- ; n. - tom TjL-*'•■•!'' ‘ ‘ Questions From Gladys. I read your department every Sun day and would like to ask some ques tions. First, do you think it is all right for a girl fourteen to have boys at her party? Second, please give two or three games or contests to have when the boys and girls first come to keep It from being \stiff.” Third, does the hair grow quicker plaited or hang ing loose (at night)? Thank you for the help I have gotten from your de partment. I like it so much. GLADYS S. B. It is perfectly right to ask boy3 to your party, and they like to be asked. I put all the contests I can lay my hands on right into the de partment; perhaps the \Nautical” one In today’s paper will help you. It Js best to braid the hair very looBely at night after a thorough brushing to remove the dust of the day. Thank you for your kind words regarding the department. ■JWTEAL time— Eager chOdrenl -LVJ’ Hungry grown-ups— Keen appetites to be appeased — And * ^Sliced Dried Beef Creamed or plain it makes a dandy. di*h. It** eaiy to prepare—ttipreme in quality, and costs no more than ordinary kind*. In Gia*» Jar» or Tina A t Every Grocers, D b b y , M s N e i n & L i b b y C h i c a g o ■m I $1 f l I p i m I W l - 41 Reply to “ G. H.” and \R. L . \ I am very sorry. I'cannot , answer; your questions.because I do not icnowfr the bestiway'totflnd out’ Is to wrVta'; direct in care of the stock company.; ’.advertised^ 7 in sist upon bavingwhat they ask for,1;.