: ;VV , . ' ; THE' OfcEGON SUNDAY 'jOURNAU' : PORTLAND, c SUNDAY MORNING, . JULY 13. 1913. : V . ' ' ' Copyright Ills, br the gSar Company, Greet Britain Right RtMrred. mmmM Langdon W. Moore, the Master Burglar, Who Stole More Than $2,000,000, but Died i v , Hi , ' 1 , . t 1 .V A I r-a ? ..... f rj v " n r- - " Penniless 'x 60PHIE LYONS. , OopyritM, itoi8.br tit ttuv Omw. ' ANGDON W. MOORE, alias Charley Adams, one of the cleverest tank burglars in the criminal history of tWa, country, cleared over $2,000,000 la tha oonria of his loot -criminal oareer. Cs died two'or threa years ago at the g of eighty without a cent, to his name. This fact In itself might not warrant tha aonoluslon that a life of ' crime Is ; not worth while, but when Moore's' career is taken' as whole, no better example of the proposition that crime does not pay joonld possibly be presented.' . " ' ' ' I knew him well. He often spoke to ma , . of bis exploits, glTing me the inside story " of many of his deeds npon which the po ' Bee had been unable to shed any light V whatewr iiOiig before ha died, Moora " 1 i. aras thoroughly conrlnoed of the futility A of a criminal .career. "What mess of It ail X hare madel" was a frequent exolama- tlon of his. . ' . .A---. - j Wot orer fifty years, Moore was perhaps . se the most oonsplcvoos, figure in the nnder- l orld.t During that ; time he pulled oft t-iom of the biggest and most daring bank . burglaries oyer perpetrated in this eoun try. He was a mechanical genius and com- .v.plete master of his trade, , . He , was a H brainier man than many of the presidents if the banks he robbed, and his. code of ' I honor was In many respects , more com . v . mendable than that of judges " who sent " v blm to Jail, He was feared by erery bank and respected by every " police official la tha .aounuT( i.y.:. . ,, ,r, .... , Olnspeotor Byrne dt , dared that. Moore's an 'aderstandlng of the me : onanism of safes was SO complete . that he was able to open them from. ' the sound emitted by tha 'ipiadle! y , vj'V. This may or may not kare been so, but it la certainly true that Moore ',knew more about tha. . weak points of locks and -w safes than any man who T orer lived, and that when ' tie matched his brains against those, of the safe - designers ha lnfarlably proved thathe was their master. ' ' f "Time and time again "pfoore got the best of aafes which the manu , ..lacturers and other safe Z crackers, had declared to be Impregnable. ' In one T case, : indeed, after two different gangs of safe crackers had attempted . . o break Into a bank - safe tn Tain, the bank officials were so confl- dent that the box was l proof against burglars that they offered to al- ..i.. . ... r low any safe-cracker who I ' cared to apply to take u the safe to the top of a mountain and experiment there with It to his heart's ' content for four days. Moore didn't avail ' himself of this offer but he did make an at 7 tempt on the safe without the knowledge pf the bank officials, and In Just one hour and forty-five minutes had solved the prob lem so effectively that he was able to make off with the 60,000 the safe had con- ftalnedl Moore's biggest burglary was the robbery of the Concord National Bank t of Concord, Mass. This remarkable piece a '. , 1" of . work, committed in broad daylight, ' netted him 1810,000. :. There .has been considerable mlsappre ' ' hension regarding the manner In which this theft was pulled off. Even Inspector ferries seemed to have been misled by the - ' erroneous stories which were circulated ' i, regarding li .- '. " Thus it had been commonly stated that -A,-, Moore was able to get Into the safe because 1 pt the carelessness of the bank cashier, , , t who had left the dial combination, marked . ln lead pencil, on the side of the vault, '- where all who ran might have read. iZt Apart from the inherent' Improbability i of such a story, Moore tojd me the slightest , , Investigation would have revealed that it . was Impossible. Tha safe .was not a com . ' blnatloa safe.ataUl' The vault doors ; ' V .v ' . 1 , i. . : .'- t : j's" '',.'"."''-.,,' . . were fitted with English ward locks. Then, too. It has been said that this clever robbery was planned quite sudden ly.by Moore and his pal Harry Howard, otherwise known as "English' Harry, an other notorious safe-cracker. As a matter of fact, Moore worked industriously for five months in preparation fori it before he was ready to turn the trick, Moore had planned to rob the bank at Trahcestown, N. H. On thinking the matter over however, he regretted his decision because- he had been born and-brought up near the town, and he did not feel like rob bing his old neighbors. . Very cleverly, Moore contrived to prevent the robbery without acquainting his pals with the fact that he had changed his mind regarding it It was while returning from this incom pleted job that Moore conceived the idea of robbing the Concord banks. . Two of them, the Concord National and the Mid dlesex Institution for Savings occupied the same building. This bunding was directly opposite the hotel where Moore happened to stop for lunch, and while he was eating he observed the cashier returning to the bank from his - dinner. The cashier unlocked the street door and left the key in the leek, Moore hastily finished his meal and stepped over to the bank. He followed the cashier upstairs and saw him unlock the outer and inner doors of the vault and also the door to the "burglar box inside. To justify his presence in the bank, . Moore presented a hundred-dollar bill to the cashier and asked to have it change! During the. few moments that he was In the bank Moore had obtained a very good idea of the problem which confronted him. He observed that the lock to the street door was of a very simple style which could be easily overcome. Moore con- TIT ' jtt-. ; r) Ti s imn In P uSi mm tne ourgiar was eionng tne Dana coor, be heard a child's voice exclaim: "Let me in!" She said she desired to see the cashier. The burglar prompt' ly replied that the cashier wss attending a direc tors conference, and the child, quite unsus picious, left the bank, In a few minutes the funds of the bank, amounting to $310,000 lay at the burglar's mercy r eluded that the lob" was worth while. He went to New York and secured the co operation of Harry Howard, who returned with him to his farm at Natick. Wax im pressions of the key of the street door were taken and the blank keys cut to fit, the Impression, but effort after effort, cover ing a period of several weeks in this direc tion, proved futile. The finished keys were tried at midnight and tber failed to fit. Then the burglars succeeded In making an entry by one of the windows. Howard made his way to the door and unscrewed some of the nuts which held the locks In place with the Idea of removing the lock and studying its mechanism. In doing this, however, he knocked off some of the varnish around the bolt head, and Moore ordered him to desist, fearing that if any more varnish fell off it might attract attention In the morning and bring about an investigation. The nuts were re " placed and the burglars gave up their work for the night Some nights later they appeared again on the scene. This time they plugged the lock in a way which would arouse no suspicion as to the manner in which it had become stopped up. The sole object of this move was to necessitate the removal of the , lock by a locksmith. Moore figuring that in doing the Job the locksmith would inevita bly knock off twhpajaj and. varnish frog .visjstterTTr. :;J2r --y.yul3 yaf iM- wM""ee ... - " ' ' '' K' ' '; - ' .-.'. ' "Moore came to grief fbitmgh the freacliery oloae of Ml accompHccs. Jftey Bad cone fatty iraTe, -with the banka funds In tteir possession, when Jn busses, pitchforkt and every other conceivable weapon. Tho burlarf were ronghlj handled, and it to the bolt heads and thus enable him and his pal to work on the lock afterward without leav ing any telltale marks. The plan worked out exactly as Moore had figured, and some nights -later Howard gained en trance to the bank by way of the window, made his way to the door, unscrewed the bolts, removed the lock and found out why It was that their keys had fall-' ed to work. A few min utes' work with a file was sufficient to make ' the lock, respond to their keys, and then it was replaced. There was another door at the top of the stairs, but the lock was easily overcome. The burglars then studied the vault Itself. It had five -different keyholes. : How thoroughly Moore went at his work will be gathered from his next step. He went to Boston and Eunted the city over for a safe of the same make as the one at Concord. His Industry was rewarded by finding one at a eafemaker's. Moore got the safemaker to explain the mechanism of the eafe to him, pretended that he wished to buy it. but finally went away without purchasing it The burglars visits to the bank con tinued. They were now able to let them selves in by tjhe front door. They ap peared upon the scene three times a week for six weeks, and they worked indus triously from midnight to three la the morning on each ' occasion. As a result of this labor they were able to open the "vault door by the end of thaCtlme. They had succeeded in fitting every one , of the , five keys necessary , to open it .' i Then they found themselves confronted with the inner door. It had two keyholes. Two weeks' more time was required to fit keys to these locks. Opening the sec ond door, they earner to the "burglar box." Moore found that one of the two locks on this box was of such a character that fitting a key to It was out of the question, and It would be necessary to blow it open. Moore paid numerous visits to the bank In the daytime in order to get further in formation which might prove valuable to him, purchasing notes as a pretext for his k presence there. On one of the visits he observed that the cashier did not place in his pocket the key which the burglars had found themselves unable to fit but laid It on a shelf In the vault With this key in their possession it would be unnecessary for them to blow the box. Borne days later Moore decided the time had arrived to "turn the trick." He and Howard drove into town. Moore etayed In the vicinity of the bank. When the cashier left the bank for his lunch Howard drove down to a grocery store al most opposite the bank, where he was to act as lookout Then Moore walked boldly to the bank and let himself In with the key he had made, j ' Just as the burglar was closing the door he heard a child's voice exclaim: Let me in!" and the child bad followed so closely upon his heels that he couldn't have closed the door without forcibly putting the child outside. Moore was unusually quick-witted. He realized that if the child's suspicions were . aroused she might alarm the town. He asked her what she wanted, and when she said she desired to see the cashier the burglar promptly replied that the cashier was attending a director's conference, but .that If she same back in an hour she could see him. Quite unsuspicious, the child left the bank .and Moore bolted the door behind 'her. Making his way to the vault the burglar found everything as he had ex pected, and in a very few minutes the funds of the bank lay at his mercy. Coolly he transferred the bonds, notes and bills to a mealsack which he carried for the purpose, and then confiscating the key which opened the bolts after they had been unlocked and which the cashier had left in its keyhole, he closed the doors of . -the safe and made his way out of the bank, , . Without any undue haste the burglars .: made a- safe getaway. Although Moore , ! was subsequently arrested for this crime. he was able to make a deal by which he secured his freedom in consideration of - his restoring sonw two hundred tlaan..;.,-yvi5..JBut a.constant overfeeding of these cells causes a conges dollars' worth of the booty to ttalwyi'V.tlott0rf?-f;W.eeUa become more and more1 distended. . Tim At wis time tjere tM typ of safe worry grows more and more acute. The pounding of the blood --"v my. v k '. ifv.wf u 'vhbuuh ui hum oj jam ceus acquires a nammeriike violence. was made by a man named LflUe. Moore decided to put it to the test He ascer . talned that there was one in an office on etaten Island, and desired to experiment npon it With the aid of a specially, devised brace he found it possible to drill holes Into the solid chilled steel of which the safe was composed and a few ounbea of rifle powder did the rest As a result of this smooess, Dutch Dan," Moore's pal, prevailed upon htm to try his . luck at another cafe of the same type at a bank at Olean, N. T. The doors were two and a quarter Inches thick: and of chilled iron cast in. one piece, Dutch Dan"- had ' previously taken several other safecrack :ers to look the ground over, but all had agreed that the joV couldn't be done in less than six hours,-and as there was a hotel directly opposite 'which didn't close till after midnight they decided that they wouldn't have . time to do the job be tween the time the 'hotel' closed and the time when people began to go abroad in the morning. " Moore knew better. He had paid a visit to the Llllle works and knew exactly how the safe was constructed. He was confi dent 'that he could get the best of it In two hours. It was this safe which; aa I have pre v vlously mentioned, the directors considered -'so safe that they offered to let any safe cracker have it to himself on the top of a mountain for four days. This offer Moore felt It. unnecessary, to accept, , Securing the services of a third man to act as lookout and to provide a rig for the getting away. Moore and Dutch Dan" de scended upon the bank one dark nlgh and ' succeeded in breaking into the "burglar proof safe in Just forty-five minutes. Moore came to grief first through the treachery of one of his accomplices. He had been engaged by other burglars for a bank Job at Rockland, Maine. An ex-city marshal and a big 'merchant of the city were said to be Interested In the plot and Moore consented to do the work. "f , .The ex-marshal, a man named Kaiser, and his friends were to furnish the neces sary teams. Against his better Judgment which led him to distrust several of those interested in the plot particularly the ex marshal and his friends, Moore went through with the Job. A premature explo sion opened the safe, but nearly wrecked the building. Across the street the bur glars saw the night watchman and a por ter staring awe-stricken at the bank. Moore quickly decided that the burglars' only chance was to secure the funds and to buy off those interested in prosecuting them, m he had been able to do In th Concord robbery. Putting a wet sponge in his mouth and a wet handkerchief over his face, he made bis way through the blinding and suffocating smoke and cleaned out the safe in the darkness. " ; . The burglara then proceeded to the spot where Kaiser was to meet them with the rigs. They had to wait several hours be fore Kaiser appeared, and from his manner Moore at onee surmised that everything was not exactly right His suspicions proved to be well-founded, for they bad hardly gone half a mUe when they were suddenly surrounded by a posse of fifty or sixty men armed with rifles, blunderbusses, pitchforks and every r other conceivable weapon. The burglars were roughly haa died, and the crowd made ready to lynch them. It was only Moore's tact which saved them. As it was, Moore found it prudent to plead guilty when his case came up for trial, and he 'was sentenced to seven years in the Maine State Prison. He served six and a half, during which time he suffered privations of the most dreadful character. I His first three years of prison life ' passed without incident Although his wife came to see blm regularly during that period, she was never allowed to speak to Moore in private. Moore got an idea that if properly managed, a campaign to. secure his pardon might prove successful. He figured that a fund of 100. would be needed for the purpose. .- Because the warden was always present when his wife visited him and his corre-, spondence was always censored, the only way he could communicate his plan to his wife was by a subterfuge. In writing to his wife, he wrote twenty words on the envelope and covered them with the ' stamp. It took him several months to impart his whols plan to his wife by this installment plan, but at the end of that time, she was in full possession of her husband's ideas on the subject She at once proceeded to raise the money and then unwisely wrote on the margin of a ' New York newspaper which she was privi leged to send her husband, the words "All right I will be there the second week in March." . This message was Intercepted by the . warden., He subjected Mrs, Moore to the most rigid examination, but she would zufl admit that she had been in secret eommuV snication with her husband. Moore waa then put through a similar ordeal, but he dented having communicated with his wife In any way and professed to know nothing; . about the message on the newspaper. - - The warden was greatly incensed, and, by way of punishment ordered that Moor should no longer enjoy . the prtvllegea which, bad previously been accorded to blm. ' Be was allowed , neither to see on write to his wife. He was no longer per' mitted to purchase food or other articles. When the clothing his wife had pur chased for him wore out, ha waa not al lowed to renew It The warden told him that he would be restored xto his former privileges only when he revealed the man' ner in which he had communicated with bis wife, and apologised for having dona ao. Moore was too obstinate to yield, and for the next three years suffered the greatest physical and mental torture in, consequence. His . clothing was reduced to tatters Fbr days at a time he was unable to eat the coarse prison food. No martyr ever: suffered greater agonies than this remark able convict during this period. Nevertheless, when Moore waa finally: released, he was a more confirm ed enemy to society than before, xte continued his operations against the banks of the coun try, but was finally caught and sentenced to cumulative penalties aggregating fifteen years. - It was not until after be had completed that term that he. really saw tha error of bis ways. Then He tried to lead an hon est life, but found it Impossible to acoun nlate any wealth, and all his in-gotten gaina had long ago been dissipated in futile at tempts to secure his freedom. He died in 1910. He was eighty yeara old.. He had been fighting society for . over fifty years, and although considered in tha underworld aa a. "successful" criminal. be knew himself that his Ufa had been a failure. -. "I have learned from bard axperience." be wrote ' shortly - before he died, "that money obtained by fraud la at a discount and will not purchase peace, comfort and a contented mind. If any young man start' lng out in life thinks he can make a sue-! cess of crime, he will discover, perhapa when too late, that his Ufa has been a fall-' lUrel".; ,.:7,,, . , l t, :. : i Langdon W. Moore's - testimony that CRIME DOES NOT PAT is WOTth heeS friar. ' ' '.'. v a a ' . - . 80P,HIB LYONS. W How Worry Really Kills You i S have often heard that worry can kill even the nine. .uvea cat but we have only half believed it, and until ' now We have had no scientlfia nrnnf tit lf. i in Medical ademVe has recently confirmed the fact and , ex . plained how worry commits its murders. It has reached the conclusion that In many Instances of what have been regarded as lunacy, and from which the victim finally dies, the case has simply been one of acute worry.' - Instead of the person dying of mental breakdown, he has worried himsslf to death.' t Worry medical science now defines as the dominance of one Idea; usually that '.of tfih&U' of soma existing condition or dread of what may happen. The Idea crowds all ' others from the mind, or permits them only the feeblest and "occasional activity.'-;';.''; , !-.yt':?:t-X4i, :;.-'t:"..;-:.;,v1' ' '& T&is " Idea pounUs, hammer-like, upon one set of brain cells. It overstlmulates them, causing an unusual flow of blood to ithose portions and a dearth of it toother, parts of the brain. ' This would not be serious if It happened only now and then, for every brain cell should be replenished by more than the usual ww m moon u urnes io aeep it properly, fed and nourished. . The sides of the cells wear thin. ' a cell bursts. There Is a so called "clot on the brain." Death follows. 1 i The cure of the worry that kills la prevention. Refuse to worry. Do your best and, having done-thla, decline as posi tively to fret about the results as yon would decline to drink , a draught of poison, .Worry comes as an occasional visitant to v everyone, but as we shut our doors, to unwelcome visitors, so we close the .portali against the entrance of worry. Admitted. it ceases to be a visitor it Is a habit and a habit tht destroys. ' , The action of worry upon the brain cells is moBt like the con etant dropping of water upon a stone. At first It makes not f the slightest impression, upon the stone, but in time It weara v ; It away. The cells of the brain are ot more delicate tissue, and i4 S - the steady wear and tear Of the extra blood supply In time'1 K quickly wears them.out. : ' - . ; - n-i . Or, according to medical science, it is as though a igarment f worn day after day without change soon falls into tatters. Bx t ;: aminations of .the brain after death have shofrn a group of- h" nerve'cells at the crown of the head that have perished in the '' ': same way the nerve of a tooth dlea , While every other brain- cell seems to be in ordinary condition this group has shrunken. ' ' urlou coincidence, and science . says a consequence, as & inevitable as effect after cause, that the hair on the portion oi' the scaln Just above this brain .area Ja:-tha flm. n vmw M.iv Heat in the scalp causes hair to grow gray., and an excess of ie blopd ' blood in any portion of the brain causes the scalp above thai lolence,:;: iportlon to be' overheated. V, 'v . t ;' ': J . ni-v t , i ?,-,y . 's . t. -,yti !; '.-h.;:i;: I'.i -..V ' f v, " ' " ,'' '?" ... i V We 7'.'-