The Mysterious Murder of Pearl Bryan, or: the Headless Horror.
Pearl Bryan. Engraved after the only Photograph that she ever had taken during her life-time.
ort Thomas, Kentucky, is most beautifully located near the banks of the Ohio river, on the Highlands, just above and on the opposite side from Cincinnati, Ohio. Although a comparatively new U. S. Military Post, it has long been a historical point, and in the early days of the Corncracker State, and while yet a portion of the County of Kentucky in the State of Virginia, was the home of the red men. There are persons yet living whose parents fought bloody battles with the Indians on the ground now occupied as a U. S. Fort, and that adjacent thereto; a picturesque portion of which is the scene of this true narrative of one of the most terrible tragedies of the nineteenth Century.
The tragedy referred to was committed at the dead of night in a lonely spot near the Fort, January 31st, 1896.
By the manner in which it was committed, it re-called the days of old, when tyrants beheaded their victims, and the murderer at heart, who was yet too cowardly to commit the deed, hired some one to do it, requiring in evidence that the deed had been done, that the head should be severed from the body and returned to the employer.
To re-call such deeds of horror to the minds of the people of a highly civilized nation at the close of the nineteenth Century by the actual commission of a similar deed, struck horror to the hearts of the people, and they were worked up to a pitch that had never been witnessed in this country before. Telephones and telegraph were called into service, and the finding of the headless body of a young and doubtless beautiful woman in a sequestered spot near Fort Thomas, was flashed around the world. So shocked was the country over this ghastly find that the metropolitan papers from one end of this country to the other informed their representatives in the Queen City to wire full particulars of the horrible deed, without any limit to the words to be used.
Unknown
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PEARL BRYAN,
——OR:——
The Headless Horror.
BIG EMBEZZLEMENTS.
HE TURNED STATE'S EVIDENCE.
THE RESULT OF AN EXAMINATION OF JACKSON, BY THE BERTILLION SYSTEM, AFTER HIS ARREST FOR THE MURDER OF PEARL BRYAN.
PICKED OUT OF A THOUSAND.
WAS IT FATE OR WAS IT DESTINE?
BUT SLIGHT CLEW TO WORK ON.
AT THE UNDERTAKER.
DRAINING THE RESERVOIR.
THE SHOES.
FLED TO LOUISVILLE.
IDENTIFIED THE BODY.
BEFORE SHE MARRIED KETTNER,
KETTNER HAD A MOTIVE.
POST-MORTEM EXAMINATION HELD ON THE BODY OF THE UNKNOWN VICTIM.
A NEWPORT SHOE DEALER DOES SOME DETECTIVE WORK.
THE DETECTIVES AND SHERIFF PLUMMER AT GREENCASTLE, IND.
IDENTIFIED THE CLOTHING.
AT THE MAYOR'S OFFICE.
THE EXAMINATION.
LOCKED UP AT THE STATION.
WALLING ARRESTED
NEVER PARALLELED WERE THE SCENES ABOUT POLICE HEADQUARTERS.
WALLING'S DAMAGING STATEMENT.
JACKSON PURCHASED COCAINE.
MET THE GIRL AT WALLINGFORD'S.
A DECOY LETTER SENT BY JACKSON TO THE MURDERED GIRL'S MOTHER.
JACKSON TELLS CHIEF DEITSCH THAT WALLING COMMITTED THE DEED.
WILL WOOD'S ARRIVAL.
WOOD EXAMINED. SAYS JACKSON BETRAYED THE GIRL. HE IS RELEASED WITHOUT BOND.
A BLOODY VALISE. IT HAD CONTAINED THE GIRL'S HEAD, AND WAS LEFT IN A SALOON.
AT WALLINGFORD'S. FRIDAY NIGHT, WITH PEARL BRYAN, JACKSON LEFT THERE IN A HACK.
ALBIN, THE BARBER. SAYS HE DID NOT DRIVE THE MYSTERIOUS CAB FRIDAY NIGHT.
JACKSON'S LETTER TO WOOD.
JACKSON'S COAT FOUND IN A SEWER.
JACKSON'S AND WALLING'S PICTURES TAKEN FOR THE ROGUES GALLERY.
ANOTHER CONFESSION.
TWO POST-MORTEMS.
THE HEADLESS BODY DISPLAYED TO THE MURDERERS.
CORONER'S INQUEST.
THE VERDICT.
ALLEGED ERRORS SET FORTH.
WILD DRIVE TO KENTUCKY.
WILL NOT PLEAD GUILTY.
BOTH PLEAD NOT GUILTY.
SCOTT JACKSON IS BROUGHT TO HIS TRIAL FOR LIFE.
A REMARKABLE INCIDENT.
OPENING OF THE TRIAL.
OBJECTIONS OF THE STATE.
CRAWFORD'S EARNEST APPEAL.
GUILTY OF MURDER IN THE FIRST DEGREE.