<h2><SPAN name="PHILO_GUBBS_GREATEST_CASE" id="PHILO_GUBBS_GREATEST_CASE"></SPAN>PHILO GUBB’S GREATEST CASE</h2>
<p>Philo Gubb, wrapped in his bathrobe, went to the door of the room that
was the headquarters of his business of paper-hanging and decorating
as well as the office of his detective business, and opened the door a
crack. It was still early in the morning, but Mr. Gubb was a modest
man, and, lest any one should see him in his scanty attire, he peered
through the crack of the door before he stepped hastily into the hall
and captured his copy of the “Riverbank Daily Eagle.” When he had
secured the still damp newspaper, he returned to his cot bed and
spread himself out to read comfortably.</p>
<p>It was a hot Iowa morning. Business was so slack that if Mr. Gubb had
not taken out his set of eight varieties of false whiskers daily and
brushed them carefully, the moths would have been able to devour them
at leisure.</p>
<p>P. Gubb opened the “Eagle.” The first words that met his eye caused
him to sit upright on his cot. At the top of the first column of the
first page were the headlines.</p>
<h3>MYSTERIOUS DEATH OF HENRY SMITZ</h3>
<hr class="tiny" />
<p class="center">Body Found In Mississippi River By Boatman Early This A.M.</p>
<hr class="tiny" />
<p class="center">Foul Play Suspected</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_330" id="Page_330"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>Mr. Gubb unfolded the paper and read the item under the headlines with
the most intense interest. Foul play meant the possibility of an
opportunity to put to use once more the precepts of the Course of
Twelve Lessons, and with them fresh in his mind Detective Gubb was
eager to undertake the solution of any mystery that Riverbank could
furnish. This was the article:—</p>
<div class="blockquot"><p>Just as we go to press we receive word through Policeman
Michael O’Toole that the well-known mussel-dredger and
boatman, Samuel Fliggis (Long Sam), while dredging for
mussels last night just below the bridge, recovered the body
of Henry Smitz, late of this place.</p>
<p>Mr. Smitz had been missing for three days and his wife had
been greatly worried. Mr. Brownson, of the Brownson Packing
Company, by whom he was employed, admitted that Mr. Smitz
had been missing for several days.</p>
<p>The body was found sewed in a sack. Foul play is suspected.</p>
</div>
<p>“I should think foul play would be suspected,” exclaimed Philo Gubb,
“if a man was sewed into a bag and deposited into the Mississippi
River until dead.”</p>
<p>He propped the paper against the foot of the cot bed and was still
reading when some one knocked on his door. He wrapped his bathrobe
carefully about him and opened the door. A young woman with
tear-dimmed eyes stood in the doorway.</p>
<p>“Mr. P. Gubb?” she asked. “I’m sorry to disturb you so early in the
morning, Mr. Gubb, but I couldn’t sleep all night. I came on a matter
of <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_331" id="Page_331"></SPAN></span>business, as you might say. There’s a couple of things I want you
to do.”</p>
<p>“Paper-hanging or deteckating?” asked P. Gubb.</p>
<p>“Both,” said the young woman. “My name is Smitz—Emily Smitz. My
husband—”</p>
<p>“I’m aware of the knowledge of your loss, ma’am,” said the
paper-hanger detective gently.</p>
<p>“Lots of people know of it,” said Mrs. Smitz. “I guess everybody knows
of it—I told the police to try to find Henry, so it is no secret. And
I want you to come up as soon as you get dressed, and paper my
bedroom.”</p>
<p>Mr. Gubb looked at the young woman as if he thought she had gone
insane under the burden of her woe.</p>
<p>“And then I want you to find Henry,” she said, “because I’ve heard you
can do so well in the detecting line.”</p>
<p>Mr. Gubb suddenly realized that the poor creature did not yet know the
full extent of her loss. He gazed down upon her with pity in his
bird-like eyes.</p>
<p>“I know you’ll think it strange,” the young woman went on, “that I
should ask you to paper a bedroom first, when my husband is lost; but
if he is gone it is because I was a mean, stubborn thing. We never
quarreled in our lives, Mr. Gubb, until I picked out the wall-paper
for our bedroom, and Henry said parrots and birds-of-paradise and
tropical flowers that were as big as umbrellas would look awful on our
bedroom wall. So I said he hadn’t <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_332" id="Page_332"></SPAN></span>anything but Low Dutch taste, and
he got mad. ‘All right, have it your own way,’ he said, and I went and
had Mr. Skaggs put the paper on the wall, and the next day Henry
didn’t come home at all.</p>
<p>“If I’d thought Henry would take it that way, I’d rather had the wall
bare, Mr. Gubb. I’ve cried and cried, and last night I made up my mind
it was all my fault and that when Henry came home he’d find a decent
paper on the wall. I don’t mind telling you, Mr. Gubb, that when the
paper was on the wall it looked worse than it looked in the roll. It
looked crazy.”</p>
<p>“Yes’m,” said Mr. Gubb, “it often does. But, however, there’s
something you’d ought to know right away about Henry.”</p>
<p>The young woman stared wide-eyed at Mr. Gubb for a moment; she turned
as white as her shirtwaist.</p>
<p>“Henry is dead!” she cried, and collapsed into Mr. Gubb’s long, thin
arms.</p>
<p>Mr. Gubb, the inert form of the young woman in his arms, glanced
around with a startled gaze. He stood miserably, not knowing what to
do, when suddenly he saw Policeman O’Toole coming toward him down the
hall. Policeman O’Toole was leading by the arm a man whose wrists bore
clanking handcuffs.</p>
<p>“What’s this now?” asked the policeman none too gently, as he saw the
bathrobed Mr. Gubb holding the fainting woman in his arms.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_333" id="Page_333"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>“I am exceedingly glad you have come,” said Mr. Gubb. “The only
meaning into it, is that this is Mrs. H. Smitz, widow-lady, fainted
onto me against my will and wishes.”</p>
<p>“I was only askin’,” said Policeman O’Toole politely enough.</p>
<p>“You shouldn’t ask such things until you’re asked to ask,” said Mr.
Gubb.</p>
<p>After looking into Mr. Gubb’s room to see that there was no easy means
of escape, O’Toole pushed his prisoner into the room and took the limp
form of Mrs. Smitz from Mr. Gubb, who entered the room and closed the
door.</p>
<p>“I may as well say what I want to say right now,” said the handcuffed
man as soon as he was alone with Mr. Gubb. “I’ve heard of Detective
Gubb, off and on, many a time, and as soon as I got into this trouble
I said, ‘Gubb’s the man that can get me out if any one can.’ My name
is Herman Wiggins.”</p>
<p>“Glad to meet you,” said Mr. Gubb, slipping his long legs into his
trousers.</p>
<p>“And I give you my word for what it is worth,” continued Mr. Wiggins,
“that I’m as innocent of this crime as the babe unborn.”</p>
<p>“What crime?” asked Mr. Gubb.</p>
<p>“Why, killing Hen Smitz—what crime did you think?” said Mr. Wiggins.
“Do I look like a man that would go and murder a man just because—”</p>
<p>He hesitated and Mr. Gubb, who was slipping his <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_334" id="Page_334"></SPAN></span>suspenders over his
bony shoulders, looked at Mr. Wiggins with keen eyes.</p>
<p>“Well, just because him and me had words in fun,” said Mr. Wiggins, “I
leave it to you, can’t a man say words in fun once in a while?”</p>
<p>“Certainly sure,” said Mr. Gubb.</p>
<p>“I guess so,” said Mr. Wiggins. “Anybody’d know a man don’t mean all
he says. When I went and told Hen Smitz I’d murder him as sure as
green apples grow on a tree, I was just fooling. But this fool
policeman—”</p>
<p>“Mr. O’Toole?”</p>
<p>“Yes. They gave him this Hen Smitz case to look into, and the first
thing he did was to arrest me for murder. Nervy, I call it.”</p>
<p>Policeman O’Toole opened the door a crack and peeked in. Seeing Mr.
Gubb well along in his dressing operations, he opened the door wider
and assisted Mrs. Smitz to a chair. She was still limp, but she was a
brave little woman and was trying to control her sobs.</p>
<p>“Through?” O’Toole asked Wiggins. “If you are, come along back to
jail.”</p>
<p>“Now, don’t talk to me in that tone of voice,” said Mr. Wiggins
angrily. “No, I’m not through. You don’t know how to treat a gentleman
like a gentleman, and never did.”</p>
<p>He turned to Mr. Gubb.</p>
<p>“The long and short of it is this: I’m arrested for the murder of Hen
Smitz, and I didn’t murder <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_335" id="Page_335"></SPAN></span>him and I want you to take my case and get
me out of jail.”</p>
<p>“Ah, stuff!” exclaimed O’Toole. “You murdered him and you know you
did. What’s the use talkin’?”</p>
<p>Mrs. Smitz leaned forward in her chair.</p>
<p>“Murdered Henry?” she cried. “He never murdered Henry. I murdered
him.”</p>
<p>“Now, ma’am,” said O’Toole politely, “I hate to contradict a lady, but
you never murdered him at all. This man here murdered him, and I’ve
got the proof on him.”</p>
<p>“I murdered him!” cried Mrs. Smitz again. “I drove him out of his
right mind and made him kill himself.”</p>
<p>“Nothing of the sort,” declared O’Toole. “This man Wiggins murdered
him.”</p>
<p>“I did not!” exclaimed Mr. Wiggins indignantly. “Some other man did
it.”</p>
<p>It seemed a deadlock, for each was quite positive. Mr. Gubb looked
from one to the other doubtfully.</p>
<p>“All right, take me back to jail,” said Mr. Wiggins. “You look up the
case, Mr. Gubb; that’s all I came here for. Will you do it? Dig into
it, hey?”</p>
<p>“I most certainly shall be glad to so do,” said Mr. Gubb, “at the
regular terms.”</p>
<p>O’Toole led his prisoner away.</p>
<p>For a few minutes Mrs. Smitz sat silent, her hands clasped, staring at
the floor. Then she looked up into Mr. Gubb’s eyes.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_336" id="Page_336"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>“You will work on this case, Mr. Gubb, won’t you?” she begged. “I have
a little money—I’ll give it all to have you do your best. It is
cruel—cruel to have that poor man suffer under the charge of murder
when I know so well Henry killed himself because I was cross with him.
You can prove he killed himself—that it was my fault. You will?”</p>
<p>“The way the deteckative profession operates onto a case,” said Mr.
Gubb, “isn’t to go to work to prove anything particularly especial. It
finds a clue or clues and follows them to where they lead to. That I
shall be willing to do.”</p>
<p>“That is all I could ask,” said Mrs. Smitz gratefully.</p>
<p>Arising from her seat with difficulty, she walked tremblingly to the
door. Mr. Gubb assisted her down the stairs, and it was not until she
was gone that he remembered that she did not know the body of her
husband had been found—sewed in a sack and at the bottom of the
river. Young husbands have been known to quarrel with their wives over
matters as trivial as bedroom wall-paper; they have even been known to
leave home for several days at a time when angry; in extreme cases
they have even been known to seek death at their own hands; but it is
not at all usual for a young husband to leave home for several days
and then in cold blood sew himself in a sack and jump into the river.
In the first place there are easier ways of terminating one’s life; in
the second place a man can jump into the river with perfect ease
without going to the trouble <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_337" id="Page_337"></SPAN></span>of sewing himself in a sack; and in the
third place it is exceedingly difficult for a man to sew himself into
a sack. It is almost impossible.</p>
<p>To sew himself into a sack a man must have no little skill, and he
must have a large, roomy sack. He takes, let us say, a sack-needle,
threaded with a good length of twine; he steps into the sack and pulls
it up over his head; he then reaches above his head, holding the mouth
of the sack together with one hand while he sews with the other hand.
In hot anger this would be quite impossible.</p>
<p>Philo Gubb thought of all this as he looked through his disguises,
selecting one suitable for the work he had in hand. He had just
decided that the most appropriate disguise would be “Number 13,
Undertaker,” and had picked up the close black wig, and long, drooping
mustache, when he had another thought. Given a bag sufficiently loose
to permit free motion of the hands and arms, and a man, even in hot
anger, might sew himself in. A man, intent on suicidally bagging
himself, would sew the mouth of the bag shut and would then cut a slit
in the front of the bag large enough to crawl into. He would then
crawl into the bag and sew up the slit, which would be immediately in
front of his hands. It could be done! Philo Gubb chose from his
wardrobe a black frock coat and a silk hat with a wide band of crape.
He carefully locked his door and went down to the street.</p>
<p>On a day as hot as this day promised to be, a frock <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_338" id="Page_338"></SPAN></span>coat and a silk
hat could be nothing but distressingly uncomfortable. Between his door
and the corner, eight various citizens spoke to Philo Gubb, calling
him by name. In fact, Riverbank was as accustomed to seeing P. Gubb in
disguise as out of disguise, and while a few children might be
interested by the sight of Detective Gubb in disguise, the older
citizens thought no more of it, as a rule, than of seeing Banker
Jennings appear in a pink shirt one day and a blue striped one the
next. No one ever accused Banker Jennings of trying to hide his
identity by a change of shirts, and no one imagined that P. Gubb was
trying to disguise himself when he put on a disguise. They considered
it a mere business custom, just as a butcher tied on a white apron
before he went behind his counter.</p>
<p>This was why, instead of wondering who the tall, dark-garbed stranger
might be, Banker Jennings greeted Philo Gubb cheerfully.</p>
<p>“Ah, Gubb!” he said. “So you are going to work on this Smitz case, are
you? Glad of it, and wish you luck. Hope you place the crime on the
right man and get him the full penalty. Let me tell you there’s
nothing in this rumor of Smitz being short of money. We did lend him
money, but we never pressed him for it. We never even asked him for
interest. I told him a dozen times he could have as much more from us
as he wanted, within reason, whenever he wanted it, and that he could
pay me when his invention was on the market.”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_339" id="Page_339"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>“No report of news of any such rumor has as yet come to my hearing,”
said P. Gubb, “but since you mention it, I’ll take it for less than it
is worth.”</p>
<p>“And that’s less than nothing,” said the banker. “Have you any clue?”</p>
<p>“I’m on my way to find one at the present moment of time,” said Mr.
Gubb.</p>
<p>“Well, let me give you a pointer,” said the banker. “Get a line on
Herman Wiggins or some of his crew, understand? Don’t say I said a
word,—I don’t want to be brought into this,—but Smitz was afraid of
Wiggins and his crew. He told me so. He said Wiggins had threatened to
murder him.”</p>
<p>“Mr. Wiggins is at present in the custody of the county jail for
killing H. Smitz with intent to murder him,” said Mr. Gubb.</p>
<p>“Oh, then—then it’s all settled,” said the banker. “They’ve proved it
on him. I thought they would. Well, I suppose you’ve got to do your
little bit of detecting just the same. Got to air the camphor out of
the false hair, eh?”</p>
<p>The banker waved a cheerful hand at P. Gubb and passed into his
banking institution.</p>
<p>Detective Gubb, cordially greeted by his many friends and admirers,
passed on down the main street, and by the time he reached the street
that led to the river he was followed by a large and growing group
intent on the pleasant occupation of watching a detective detect.</p>
<p>As Mr. Gubb walked toward the river, other citizens <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_340" id="Page_340"></SPAN></span>joined the group,
but all kept a respectful distance behind him. When Mr. Gubb reached
River Street and his false mustache fell off, the interest of the
audience stopped short three paces behind him and stood until he had
rescued the mustache and once more placed its wires in his nostrils.
Then, when he moved forward again, they too moved forward. Never,
perhaps, in the history of crime was a detective favored with a more
respectful gallery.</p>
<p>On the edge of the river, Mr. Gubb found Long Sam Fliggis, the mussel
dredger, seated on an empty tar-barrel with his own audience ranged
before him listening while he told, for the fortieth time, the story
of his finding of the body of H. Smitz. As Philo Gubb approached, Long
Sam ceased speaking, and his audience and Mr. Gubb’s gallery merged
into one great circle which respectfully looked and listened while Mr.
Gubb questioned the mussel dredger.</p>
<p><SPAN name="Illo20" id="Illo20"></SPAN></p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/i364.jpg" class="ispace" width-obs="500" height-obs="318" alt="HE WAS FOLLOWED BY A LARGE AND GROWING GROUP INTENT ON WATCHING A DETECTIVE DETECT" title="" /> <span class="caption">HE WAS FOLLOWED BY A LARGE AND GROWING GROUP INTENT ON WATCHING A DETECTIVE DETECT</span></div>
<p>“Suicide?” said Long Sam scoffingly. “Why, he wan’t no more a suicide
than I am right now. He was murdered or wan’t nothin’! I’ve dredged up
some suicides in my day, and some of ’em had stones tied to ’em, to
make sure they’d sink, and some thought they’d sink without no
ballast, but nary one of ’em ever sewed himself into a bag, and I give
my word,” he said positively, “that Hen Smitz couldn’t have sewed
himself into that burlap bag unless some one done the sewing. Then the
feller that did it was an assistant-suicide, and the way <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_341" id="Page_341"></SPAN></span>I look at it is that an assistant-suicide is jest the same as a
murderer.”</p>
<p>The crowd murmured approval, but Mr. Gubb held up his hand for
silence.</p>
<p>“In certain kinds of burlap bags it is possibly probable a man could
sew himself into it,” said Mr. Gubb, and the crowd, seeing the logic
of the remark applauded gently but feelingly.</p>
<p>“You ain’t seen the way he was sewed up,” said Long Sam, “or you
wouldn’t talk like that.”</p>
<p>“I haven’t yet took a look,” admitted Mr. Gubb, “but I aim so to do
immediately after I find a clue onto which to work up my case. An A-1
deteckative can’t set forth to work until he has a clue, that being a
rule of the game.”</p>
<p>“What kind of a clue was you lookin’ for?” asked Long Sam. “What’s a
clue, anyway?”</p>
<p>“A clue,” said P. Gubb, “is almost anything connected with the late
lamented, but generally something that nobody but a deteckative would
think had anything to do with anything whatsoever. Not infrequently
often it is a button.”</p>
<p>“Well, I’ve got no button except them that is sewed onto me,” said
Long Sam, “but if this here sack-needle will do any good—”</p>
<p>He brought from his pocket the point of a heavy sack-needle and laid
it in Philo Gubb’s palm. Mr. Gubb looked at it carefully. In the eye
of the needle still remained a few inches of twine.</p>
<p>“I cut that off’n the burlap he was sewed up in,” <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_342" id="Page_342"></SPAN></span>volunteered Long
Sam, “I thought I’d keep it as a sort of nice little souvenir. I’d
like it back again when you don’t need it for a clue no more.”</p>
<p>“Certainly sure,” agreed Mr. Gubb, and he examined the needle
carefully.</p>
<p>There are two kinds of sack-needles in general use. In both, the point
of the needle is curved to facilitate pushing it into and out of a
closely filled sack; in both, the curved portion is somewhat flattened
so that the thumb and finger may secure a firm grasp to pull the
needle through; but in one style the eye is at the end of the shaft
while in the other it is near the point. This needle was like neither;
the eye was midway of the shaft; the needle was pointed at each end
and the curved portions were not flattened. Mr. Gubb noticed another
thing—the twine was not the ordinary loosely twisted hemp twine, but
a hard, smooth cotton cord, like carpet warp.</p>
<p>“Thank you,” said Mr. Gubb, “and now I will go elsewhere to
investigate to a further extent, and it is not necessarily imperative
that everybody should accompany along with me if they don’t want to.”</p>
<p>But everybody did want to, it seemed. Long Sam and his audience joined
Mr. Gubb’s gallery and, with a dozen or so newcomers, they followed
Mr. Gubb at a decent distance as he walked toward the plant of the
Brownson Packing Company, which stood on the riverbank some two blocks
away.</p>
<p>It was here Henry Smitz had worked. Six or eight buildings of various
sizes, the largest of which stood <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_343" id="Page_343"></SPAN></span>immediately on the river’s edge,
together with the “yards” or pens, all enclosed by a high board fence,
constituted the plant of the packing company, and as Mr. Gubb appeared
at the gate the watchman there stood aside to let him enter.</p>
<p>“Good-morning, Mr. Gubb,” he said pleasantly. “I been sort of
expecting you. Always right on the job when there’s crime being done,
ain’t you? You’ll find Merkel and Brill and Jokosky and the rest of
Wiggins’s crew in the main building, and I guess they’ll tell you just
what they told the police. They hate it, but what else can they say?
It’s the truth.”</p>
<p>“What is the truth?” asked Mr. Gubb.</p>
<p>“That Wiggins was dead sore at Hen Smitz,” said the watchman. “That
Wiggins told Hen he’d do for him if he lost them their jobs like he
said he would. That’s the truth.”</p>
<p>Mr. Gubb—his admiring followers were halted at the gate by the
watchman—entered the large building and inquired his way to Mr.
Wiggins’s department. He found it on the side of the building toward
the river and on the ground floor. On one side the vast room led into
the refrigerating room of the company; on the other it opened upon a
long but narrow dock that ran the width of the building.</p>
<p>Along the outer edge of the dock were tied two barges, and into these
barges some of Wiggins’s crew were dumping mutton—not legs of mutton
but entire sheep, neatly sewed in burlap. The large <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_344" id="Page_344"></SPAN></span>room was the
packing and shipping room, and the work of Wiggins’s crew was that of
sewing the slaughtered and refrigerated sheep carcasses in burlap for
shipment. Bales of burlap stood against one wall; strands of hemp
twine ready for the needle hung from pegs in the wall and the posts
that supported the floor above. The contiguity of the refrigerating
room gave the room a pleasantly cool atmosphere.</p>
<p>Mr. Gubb glanced sharply around. Here was the burlap, here were
needles, here was twine. Yonder was the river into which Hen Smitz had
been thrown. He glanced across the narrow dock at the blue river. As
his eye returned he noticed one of the men carefully sweeping the dock
with a broom—sweeping fragments of glass into the river. As the men
in the room watched him curiously, Mr. Gubb picked up a piece of
burlap and put it in his pocket, wrapped a strand of twine around his
finger and pocketed the twine, examined the needles stuck in
improvised needle-holders made by boring gimlet holes in the wall, and
then walked to the dock and picked up one of the pieces of glass.</p>
<p>“Clues,” he remarked, and gave his attention to the work of
questioning the men.</p>
<p>Although manifestly reluctant, they honestly admitted that Wiggins had
more than once threatened Hen Smitz—that he hated Hen Smitz with the
hatred of a man who has been threatened with the loss of his job. Mr.
Gubb learned that Hen Smitz <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_345" id="Page_345"></SPAN></span>had been the foreman for the entire
building—a sort of autocrat with, as Wiggins’s crew informed him, an
easy job. He had only to see that the crews in the building turned out
more work this year than they did last year. “’Ficiency” had been his
motto, they said, and they hated “’Ficiency.”</p>
<p>Mr. Gubb’s gallery was awaiting him at the gate, and its members were
in a heated discussion as to what Mr. Gubb had been doing. They ceased
at once when he appeared and fell in behind him as he walked away from
the packing house and toward the undertaking establishment of Mr.
Holworthy Bartman, on the main street. Here, joining the curious group
already assembled, the gallery was forced to wait while Mr. Gubb
entered. His task was an unpleasant but necessary one. He must visit
the little “morgue” at the back of Mr. Bartman’s establishment.</p>
<p>The body of poor Hen Smitz had not yet been removed from the bag in
which it had been found, and it was to the bag Mr. Gubb gave his
closest attention. The bag—in order that the body might be
identified—had not been ripped, but had been cut, and not a stitch
had been severed. It did not take Mr. Gubb a moment to see that Hen
Smitz had not been sewed in a bag at all. He had been sewed in
burlap—burlap “yard goods,” to use a shopkeeper’s term—and it was
burlap identical with that used by Mr. Wiggins and his crew. It was no
loose bag of burlap—but a close-fitting wrapping <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_346" id="Page_346"></SPAN></span>of burlap; a cocoon
of burlap that had been drawn tight around the body, as burlap is
drawn tight around the carcass of sheep for shipment, like a mummy’s
wrappings.</p>
<p>It would have been utterly impossible for Hen Smitz to have sewed
himself into the casing, not only because it bound his arms tight to
his sides, but because the burlap was lapped over and sewed from the
outside. This, once and for all, ended the suicide theory. The
question was: Who was the murderer?</p>
<p>As Philo Gubb turned away from the bier, Undertaker Bartman entered
the morgue.</p>
<p>“The crowd outside is getting impatient, Mr. Gubb,” he said in his
soft, undertakery voice. “It is getting on toward their lunch hour,
and they want to crowd into my front office to find out what you’ve
learned. I’m afraid they’ll break my plate-glass windows, they’re
pushing so hard against them. I don’t want to hurry you, but if you
would go out and tell them Wiggins is the murderer they’ll go away. Of
course there’s no doubt about Wiggins being the murderer, since he has
admitted he asked the stock-keeper for the electric-light bulb.”</p>
<p>“What bulb?” asked Philo Gubb.</p>
<p>“The electric-light bulb we found sewed inside this burlap when we
sliced it open,” said Bartman. “Matter of fact, we found it in Hen’s
hand. O’Toole took it for a clue and I guess it fixes the murder on
Wiggins beyond all doubt. The stock-keeper says Wiggins got it from
him.”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_347" id="Page_347"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>“And what does Wiggins remark on that subject?” asked Mr. Gubb.</p>
<p>“Not a word,” said Bartman. “His lawyer told him not to open his
mouth, and he won’t. Listen to that crowd out there!”</p>
<p>“I will attend to that crowd right presently,” said P. Gubb, sternly.
“What I should wish to know now is why Mister Wiggins went and sewed
an electric-light bulb in with the corpse for.”</p>
<p>“In the first place,” said Mr. Bartman, “he didn’t sew it in with any
corpse, because Hen Smitz wasn’t a corpse when he was sewed in that
burlap, unless Wiggins drowned him first, for Dr. Mortimer says Hen
Smitz died of drowning; and in the second place, if you had a live man
to sew in burlap, and had to hold him while you sewed him, you’d be
liable to sew anything in with him.</p>
<p>“My idea is that Wiggins and some of his crew jumped on Hen Smitz and
threw him down, and some of them held him while the others sewed him
in. My idea is that Wiggins got that electric-light bulb to replace
one that had burned out, and that he met Hen Smitz and had words with
him, and they clinched, and Hen Smitz grabbed the bulb, and then the
others came, and they sewed him into the burlap and dumped him into
the river.</p>
<p>“So all you’ve got to do is to go out and tell that crowd that Wiggins
did it and that you’ll let them know who helped him as soon as you
find out. And you better do it before they break my windows.”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_348" id="Page_348"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>Detective Gubb turned and went out of the morgue. As he left the
undertaker’s establishment the crowd gave a slight cheer, but Mr. Gubb
walked hurriedly toward the jail. He found Policeman O’Toole there and
questioned him about the bulb; and O’Toole, proud to be the center of
so large and interested a gathering of his fellow citizens, pulled the
bulb from his pocket and handed it to Mr. Gubb, while he repeated in
more detail the facts given by Mr. Bartman. Mr. Gubb looked at the
bulb.</p>
<p>“I presume to suppose,” he said, “that Mr. Wiggins asked the
stock-keeper for a new bulb to replace one that was burned out?”</p>
<p>“You’re right,” said O’Toole. “Why?”</p>
<p>“For the reason that this bulb is a burned-out bulb,” said Mr. Gubb.</p>
<p>And so it was. The inner surface of the bulb was darkened slightly,
and the filament of carbon was severed. O’Toole took the bulb and
examined it curiously.</p>
<p>“That’s odd, ain’t it?” he said.</p>
<p>“It might so seem to the non-deteckative mind,” said Mr. Gubb, “but to
the deteckative mind, nothing is odd.”</p>
<p>“No, no, this ain’t so odd, either,” said O’Toole, “for whether Hen
Smitz grabbed the bulb before Wiggins changed the new one for the old
one, or after he changed it, don’t make so much difference, when you
come to think of it.”</p>
<p>“To the deteckative mind,” said Mr. Gubb, “it <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_349" id="Page_349"></SPAN></span>makes the difference
that this ain’t the bulb you thought it was, and hence consequently it
ain’t the bulb Mister Wiggins got from the stock-keeper.”</p>
<hr class="medium" />
<p>Mr. Gubb started away. The crowd followed him. He did not go in search
of the original bulb at once. He returned first to his room, where he
changed his undertaker disguise for Number Six, that of a blue
woolen-shirted laboring-man with a long brown beard. Then he led the
way back to the packing house.</p>
<p>Again the crowd was halted at the gate, but again P. Gubb passed
inside, and he found the stock-keeper eating his luncheon out of a tin
pail. The stock-keeper was perfectly willing to talk.</p>
<p>“It was like this,” said the stock-keeper. “We’ve been working
overtime in some departments down here, and Wiggins and his crew had
to work overtime the night Hen Smitz was murdered. Hen and Wiggins was
at outs, or anyway I heard Hen tell Wiggins he’d better be hunting
another job because he wouldn’t have this one long, and Wiggins told
Hen that if he lost his job he’d murder him—Wiggins would murder Hen,
that is. I didn’t think it was much of anything but loose talk at the
time. But Hen was working overtime too. He’d been working nights up in
that little room of his on the second floor for quite some time, and
this night Wiggins come to me and he says Hen had asked him for a
fresh thirty-two-candle-power bulb. So I give <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_350" id="Page_350"></SPAN></span>it to Wiggins, and then
I went home. And, come to find out, Wiggins sewed that bulb up with
Hen.”</p>
<p>“Perhaps maybe you have sack-needles like this into your stock-room,”
said P. Gubb, producing the needle Long Sam had given him. The
stock-keeper took the needle and examined it carefully.</p>
<p>“Never had any like that,” he said.</p>
<p>“Now, if,” said Philo Gubb,—“if the bulb that was sewed up into the
burlap with Henry Smitz wasn’t a new bulb, and if Mr. Wiggins had
given the new bulb to Henry, and if Henry had changed the new bulb for
an old one, where would he have changed it at?”</p>
<p>“Up in his room, where he was always tinkering at that machine of
his,” said the stock-keeper.</p>
<p>“Could I have the pleasure of taking a look into that there room for a
moment of time?” asked Mr. Gubb.</p>
<p>The stock-keeper arose, returned the remnants of his luncheon to his
dinner-pail and led the way up the stairs. He opened the door of the
room Henry Smitz had used as a work-room, and P. Gubb walked in. The
room was in some confusion, but, except in one or two particulars, no
more than a work-room is apt to be. A rather cumbrous machine—the
invention on which Henry Smitz had been working—stood as the murdered
man had left it, all its levers, wheels, arms, and cogs intact. A
chair, tipped over, lay on the floor. A roll of burlap stood on a
roller by the machine. Looking up, Mr. Gubb <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_351" id="Page_351"></SPAN></span>saw, on the ceiling, the
lighting fixture of the room, and in it was a clean, shining
thirty-two-candle-power bulb. Where another similar bulb might have
been in the other socket was a plug from which an insulated wire,
evidently to furnish power, ran to the small motor connected with the
machine on which Henry Smitz had been working.</p>
<p>The stock-keeper was the first to speak.</p>
<p>“Hello!” he said. “Somebody broke that window!” And it was true.
Somebody had not only broken the window, but had broken every pane and
the sash itself. But Mr. Gubb was not interested in this. He was
gazing at the electric bulb and thinking of Part Two, Lesson Six of
the Course of Twelve Lessons—“How to Identify by Finger-Prints, with
General Remarks on the Bertillon System.” He looked about for some
means of reaching the bulb above his head. His eye lit on the fallen
chair. By placing the chair upright and placing one foot on the frame
of Henry Smitz’s machine and the other on the chair-back, he could
reach the bulb. He righted the chair and stepped onto its seat. He put
one foot on the frame of Henry Smitz’s machine; very carefully he put
the other foot on the top of the chair-back. He reached upward and
unscrewed the bulb.</p>
<p>The stock-keeper saw the chair totter. He sprang forward to steady it,
but he was too late. Philo Gubb, grasping the air, fell on the broad,
level board that formed the middle part of Henry Smitz’s machine.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_352" id="Page_352"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>The effect was instantaneous. The cogs and wheels of the machine began
to revolve rapidly. Two strong, steel arms flopped down and held
Detective Gubb to the table, clamping his arms to his side. The roll
of burlap unrolled, and as it unrolled, the loose end was seized and
slipped under Mr. Gubb and wrapped around him and drawn taut, bundling
him as a sheep’s carcass is bundled. An arm reached down and back and
forth, with a sewing motion, and passed from Mr. Gubb’s head to his
feet. As it reached his feet a knife sliced the burlap in which he was
wrapped from the burlap on the roll.</p>
<p>And then a most surprising thing happened. As if the board on which he
lay had been a catapult, it suddenly and unexpectedly raised Philo
Gubb and tossed him through the open window. The stock-keeper heard a
muffled scream and then a great splash, but when he ran to the window,
the great paper-hanger detective had disappeared in the bosom of the
Mississippi.</p>
<p>Like Henry Smitz he had tried to reach the ceiling by standing on the
chair-back; like Henry Smitz he had fallen upon the newly invented
burlaping and loading machine; like Henry Smitz he had been wrapped
and thrown through the window into the river; but, unlike Henry Smitz,
he had not been sewn into the burlap, because Philo Gubb had the
double-pointed shuttle-action needle in his pocket.</p>
<p>Page Seventeen of Lesson Eleven of the Rising <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_353" id="Page_353"></SPAN></span>Sun Detective Agency’s
Correspondence School of Detecting’s Course of Twelve Lessons, says:—</p>
<div class="blockquot"><p>In cases of extreme difficulty of solution it is well for
the detective to reënact as nearly as possible the probable
action of the crime.</p>
</div>
<p>Mr. Philo Gubb had done so. He had also proved that a man may be sewn
in a sack and drowned in a river without committing willful suicide or
being the victim of foul play.</p>
<h3>THE END</h3>
<hr class="large" />
<p class="center">The Riverside Press<br/>
<br/>
CAMBRIDGE · MASSACHUSETTS<br/>
<br/>
U · S · A</p>
<hr class="large" />
<h3><span class="smcap">Transcriber’s Note:</span></h3>
<p>Minor changes have been made to correct typesetters’ errors; otherwise,
every effort has been made to remain true to the author’s words and
intent.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />