A N ESCAPE W IN K E D A T By JOHN D. JAMIESON I have often been asked if in my de teetive work 1 had sheered off from the wrong trail when I was about to nab a criminal through sympathy. 1 never did that, but 1 once lost a woman v hom I had under arrest because I had become convinced that she was inno­ cent. 1 did not tell her that she might escape, but pretended to trust her. I was sorry afterward that I didn't let her know that I was willing she should go, for I saw her do something to gain her freedom that made my blood cur- d!e. A cashier of a bank had been con­ victed of defalcation, had been sent to the penitentiary and by means of steel saws sent him by his wife had cut the bars of a window of his cell. She had also provided him with a rope, on which he* had lowered himself to the ground and had then thrown it over the prison wall, she being outside to catch it and secure the end. lie then climbed on to the wall, and his w ife and three of his friends had held a blanket, into which he had jumped. Then, gettiug into a carriage, he had been driven away. The warden was quite sure that the cscafied man's wife had secured his freedom, but had no evidence to sup­ port the charge. Some time after the escape I was ordered by my chief to go to Albany, where the woman was liv­ ing, arrest her on n trumped up charge and bring her to Philadelphia, where the crime of which her husband had been convicted was committed. The object was to force her to betray his whereabouts, or, rather, to force him to give himself up to secure his wife's freedom. I found the lady—she was a lady, and a refined ladj\ too—living in seclu­ sion. She doubtless surmised what kind of a game was to be played on her, for I saw her face set with reso­ lution. I did not believe anything could be forced out of her. She went with me without making any ado, and 1 refrained from the indignity of plac­ ing handcuffs ou her. I took a seat be­ side her in the train, resolving to make the journey as easy for her us possible. During the ride to New York she told me one of the most interesting stories of how a man's ruin may be planned to save another that I ever listened to. If the persou who laid the scheme had devoted his geuius to writing detective stories he might have made a large fortune. The most ingenious part of it was that he fixed on an innocent man so that there was no way that he could prove his innocence without casting an aspersion on his own wife. Not only did the lady make the dif­ ferent steps in the plot plain to me, but by the artless way she told her story convinced me that she had not Invented it find was telling the truth. And when she told me that she anJ her husband had intended to start for Brazil with her children In a few days to begin life anew under a different name I completely soured on my job. On reaching New York we took snip­ per together in a restaurant, crossed the river and boarded a train for Phil­ adelphia. Having told me her story, the lady sat silently weeping. Her ar­ rest had spoiled a plan that she and her husband had l»een working ami waiting for for several months. If her story and my faith in its truth had not conquered me her tears would have done so—that is. being convinced of Injc lunoceir e. After leaving Trenton I told her that 1 was going into the smoking car. “ Aren't you afraid I'll escape?" she asked. “ I don’t see how you can,” I replied. “ This tnpn doesu't stop till we reach Philadelphia, and before that I'll be back.” I did not Intend to return to her till we were in the station at Philadelphia, hoping that she would find a way of giving me the slip there, and thought it possible that the train might pull up on the way and go slow enough for her to jump off. I smoked several cigars. At one of the towns through which we passed where there were many tracks I no­ ticed that we were running beside a train moving in the same direction as ourselves and on the next track. The two trains were so near together that 1 could put my hand in at the window of the one beside us. Both trains were going at pretty good speed. Presently the other train began to pull ahead of ur'ne. I was sitting in the front seat of the smoking car ou the side next the other train. Suddenly as the platform of the rear car o f the other trains caught and passed the platform of my ear I saw my prisoner bend forward, grasp tlie rail of the platform beside her and step on to the other train. She missed the rail she tried for, and I thought it was all up with her. but she caught the rear rail and succeeded In clambering on to the platform. That's all I saw, for the train she was on passed out of sight. I thanked heaven that I had been spared sending the poor woman to her death and that she had escaped me. Just before reaching Philadelphia 1 went into the car where I had left my prisoner and, not finding her, on reach­ ing the hotel at which I put up notified my chief o f the woman’s escape, telling him exactly how she had effected It. It is needless to say I was discharg­ ed. After some difficulty I found an­ other berth and never regretted what 1 had done. Many years after the lady’s husband was exonerated, and the story Just as she told It to me came out in the newspapers. When in Tillamook and you want a good meal at a most reasonable price call at M. Oleson’s in the Ramsey Hotel dining room. The Evening Telegram, Portland’s best daily paper, and the Cloverdnle Courier, both papers one year for only Under New Management PROFESSIONAL Rooms 50 and 75 Cents, Special Rates by the Week. «X» *x# •'(• KX* «X!» «X* KX» *\* •>• • W. A. WILLIAMS | RELIABLE HARNESS M AKER Harness and Saddlery 5. TuIIman Tires and Tubes—Beet A ou earth. Tillamook, - - Oregon. • * ,» «x.S «X* • 1« •>.* sX i** X** X*« X« «X* * Livtiry Operated and Owned hy M ERMAP N D A I L B Y , G lovcrdale, - Deliveries Leave Orders with Henry Kamp, at Cloverdale Hotel. F. R. BEALS REAL ESTATE Write for Literature. • ■ OREGON FRANK TAYLOR, Bell Phone 53-J P. O. 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