The times and democrat. (Orangeburg, S.C.) 1881-current, March 30, 1911, Page 3, Image 3

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"Old Bili" Miner Had Been Bandit For Nuirly Forty Years, RECKLESS DESPERADO Escapes From a life Sentence and at Sixty-five Years of Age Holds, Up a Railroad Train au Fearlessly as in His Earlier Days He Robbed Stages in the Lonely Mountain. Old Bill Miner, the notorious train robber, is again in prison. In all probability he will spend the rest of his life there, but he has shown him self so nimble in escaping that it would be f.nwise to make any confi dent predictions. Once before he re ceived a i&fe sentence, but he was soon free. However, he is now six ty-five ye?.rs old and cannot be so adroit as 'ie was when he began his career of crime fortv-two vears aco, although what he has lost in agility he has mad* up in the cunning that comes of experience. Miner's most recent. crime, for which he f:s now in iail at GainsvUJe. Ga., was the bold-un of train No. 36 on the Southern Railroad near White Sulphur, Hall County. Ga.. earlv on February 18. It is forty-two years since Miner's first nrison exnerienee. which "was la the San Ouentin Jali in California, and tbat. like all those that followed, was for the same of fense. He beean with stace coaches, he endB with railway trains. Just when "Old Bill" Miner herrno to break the law no on" but he him self knows. Far back in the 6u b ?drivers of stag* coaches making trips back and forth across the State of California beean to come in from their lonely mountain journeys with cash boxes rifled of their contents, sometimes a horse short, and In ev ery case with the same story. A loneiy soot on the road, some times in the day time, sometimes at night, a sinele highwayman and tho magic words. "Hands up!" The tale never varied. For want of a better name the lone highwayman came to be known far and wide as California Billy." The exploits of "California Hilly continued for several years. All ef forts at his capture were in vam. Many posses hunted the lone outlaw, tempted by offers of generous re wards. But he seemed to bear a charmed life. It was not until 1869 that he was caught. The driver of a stage that ran in from the hills b?ck of Sacra mento jumped from his seat in front of the office early one morning in the spring of that year and breath lessly told hom he had been held up but a few hours before. The strong box of the stage had been heavy with gold dust sent in by miners. Never before had "California Bill" dared to attack a coach so close to a town. Always before he had chosen a stage further up in the mountains, where many hours must elapse before a posse could even start after him. In tw-anty minutes from the time the driver told his story a heavny armed posse was riding hard back over the trail, -ft was not dirficuu to pick up traces of the bandit; be fore nightfall his hunters were close upon him, and as the sun sank be hind the hills they surrounded him. The posse expected a fight, lo their surprise the outlaw offered no resistance, but surrendered at their command. Miner could fight when a fight wculd do any good, but like a good poker player who knows when to lay clown his cards, he knew when fighting would be folly. The same craft he showed in picking out the time and place to hold up a stage he displayed in picking out the time and place to fight. This was neither. In triumph the posse took their captive into Sacramento. His trial was speedy and less than a week after his capture he began serving a term In San Quentin prison. While Miner, or "California Billy" as he was still called, was in prison not a single 3tage coach was held up in that part of California. When Miner was released he left California as rapidly as possible. He had become too well known in that State. The wider country of Colora do offered greater attractions. In this new field of operations his meth ods were the same as in the old. Time after time did a lone bandit, masked and heavily armed, stop the stage coaches that ran through the mountains. For more than ten years Miner had been pursuing his profes sion asi highwayman, and only once In all those years had be been caught. In 1S78 Miner, single-handed, held up the Del Norte coach and compell ed the driver and several passengers to stand to one side while he rifW the money box of $3,000 in currency. It was such a haul as Miner had be?n coveting for some time. Ah hough almost a thousand men sought him, he esicaped with his booty and got quickly out of the State. He had long cherished a desire to see some thing of the country, so he went straight to Chicago, where he bought himself several suits of clothes, a handsome gold watch and chain and several other articles of jewelry. The smaller towns of Michigan attracted him and for several months he posed as a wealthy California mining man. He spent money lavishly, and where ever he stayed he made himself one of the best known and most popu lar men in town. His popularity with women amounted to triumph. But at last his money gave out and Min er was face to face with the choice of working or returning to the West and resuming his life as a bandit. He chose the latter. The short time he s.rent in Michi gan, however, wrought a great charjge in Miner's methods. He no longer went about his work single handed and he became more willing to take a chance. Miner had never organized a band. Now, however, he sought out one or two companions and became the leader of a little band of skillful outlaws. ' Of all the men he met in Michigan Miner found only one whose spirit | matched his own. This was a farm hand named Stanton T. Jones. When Miner returned to the West Jones ?went with him. I Early in the spring of 1881 Miner and Jones again stopped the Del Norte stage and cleaned out the money chest and ?:ot away to the fastnesses of the mountains. Al though he was masked, the driver of the stage was positive in his indenti fication of Miner. Posses immedi ately started after the two bandits, but Miner's cunning was greater than that of the officers and the chase was fruitless. Soon after the second Del Norte stage hold-up a third desperado join ed 'Miner and Jone;.'. His name was James East and his career was as short as it was violent. Having eluded the deputy sheriffs who were seeking them Miner and his two companions started on horse back for California. They had stol en their horses. For their living: they depended upon the farmers. Up through Marshall's Pass toward Sag uche the three bandits made their way, stealing fresh horses whenever the ones they were riding became worn out and robbing systmatically as they rode, and Isaving a wake of furious farmers, stockmen and min ers. So bold was their trip and so wide spread their depredations that the entire country was aroused. A posse of determined men was organized and in the hills n^ar Villa Grove a pitched battle was fought, which re sulted in the capture of all three out laws. Life imprisonment stared the cap tives in the face. Vheir captors were determined that they shouldl be brought to justice. The nearest pris on stout enough to hold them secure ly was back at Del Norte, and for there they started. To make escape impossible the thr?e men were tied together with balirg wire and thrown into a buckboard wa^on. All' day long the crdvacade marched back through the country over which the outlaws had previously ridden rougu shod. Th.- Urst n ght's camp was to be at Wagon Wheel Gap. It was a little after 1 o'clock in the morning. The outlaws, still bound together with the heavy wire, were supposed to be asleep. Their guards, heavy-e ed, sat surrounding them, rifles within reach. So far as the members of the posse knew the captives had not an opportunity to exchange a single word beyond the hearing of at least one of the guards. Suddenly the quiet of the camp was broken. The three hud dled figures of the stage robbers sprang to their feet. Silently and unnoticed they hed broken the wire that bound them, secured a single revolver and were prepared to fight for their freedom or die in the at tempt. The fight was sharp and brief. Completely thrown off their guard, the members of t' e posse were slow to realize what was taking place. Before they quite regained their fac ulties two of their number lay wounded on the ground and the out laws were disappearing in the dark ness Miner and Jones escaped. East was recaptured, 'taken to Del Norte and sent to jail f? r a long term. Having lost one of his gang, Miner added another to his party and on November 7, 1881, reappeared in California after an absence of twehe years, held up the stage that inn from Sonora, Tuolumne County, to Milton, and secured $32,000 in cash and gold dust. Two o?' the gang were quickly caught; Miner rr <naged to elude the officers for seve?- l weeks, but was finally run to ea. a. ^he trial was brief and justice severe. The three robbers were sent to San Quentin prison for twenty-five years. Out of jail no more desperate char acter lived than "Old Bill" Miner. In prison he wac a model. It was through no fault of his that, he aroused the enmity of another con vict. Bill Hicks, who almost killed him. It was 1901, twenty years later, before "Old Bill" Miner could again breathe the air a free man. By good behavior lie cut his sentence five years, and the authorities be lieved that when he walked out of San Quentin his days as an outlaw were ended. It was a different world which Miner fouud when he left prison. The stage coach had given way to the railroad. Wrhere there had been wilderness in the days when the name "California Billy" brought terror to the hearts of stage drivers and trav ellers, there war. now thickly settled country. The authorities believed that time, if nothing else, had brought to a close the days of the bandit. For a year or two it seem ed that such was the case. But "Old Bill" Miner was merely adopting himself to the new circum stances. There were no more stage coaches to be robbed, it was true, but the same gun that had sent cola chills up the bnck of the stage drlv ed would bring the grip of terror to the heart of the engineer, once he was brought to gaze down its threat ening barrel. Thus reasoned "Old Bill" Miner, erstwhile stage robber, as he thought out his plans to be come a train robber. Toward the close of 1903 the au thorities of Oregon were startled by the hold-up of an express train on the Oregon Railway and Navigation Company's line at Milepost No. 21, near Corbett, Ore. The hold-up was masked, of slight build, gray-haired and evidently and old-timer. Rewards amounting to $1,300 offered, but the train robber was not captured. A year later the Canadian Pacifie s transcontinental express was stop ped at Mission Junction, British Co lumbia, by a lone bandit, who with i cold and deliberate nerve compelled 1 thev express messenger to open the safe, which contained close to $10, 000. This he took and got away quickly. So daring has been the robbery that the authorities recognized the imperative necessity of capturing its perpetrator. The Dominion Govern ment offered a reward of 85,000 for him. This was increased to $12, 800 by the railroad and provinica' authorities. There was no doubt as to the Identity of the masked bandit. His methods and his cool daring identified him as non other than. "Old Bill" Miner. With a small fortune offered as a price on his head, Miner vanished. Plentifully supplied with money as a result of his two train robberies, it was not difficult for him to live. Less than two years later, on May 10,1906, at 11 o'clock in the night, as the transcontinental express of the Canadian Pacific Railroad was pulling up the heavy grade just ease of Durrer, British Columbia, the en gineer was startled by tne command i "Hands up!" Looking around he saw a small masked man climbing over the tender, keeping him covered in the mean time with a revolver. The engineer did not parley. Obeying the command, be uncoup led the express car and took it a mile up the road. The masked robbjr, who was none other than "Old Bill" j Miner, kept him, the fireman and the express messenger covered with two revolvers, while two pals broke open the car and rifled it of its contents. A posse organized to pursue the bandits soon found Miner's compan-j ions near the scene of the robbery. Miner himself escaped to the islands of the coast, but was hunted down. They found him well entrenched. He fought as long as there was a chance for escape, then, finding himself sur rounded, he surendered. The trial was a memoraHe one in British Columbia. The evidence was I conclusive. Although Miner claimed his name* was Edwards, the Pinker tons quickly established his identity, and upon his conviction he was sen tenced to life imprisonment. "Old Bill" Miner was sixty when he became No. 980 and was enrolled as a lifer on the books of the peui-j tentiary at New -Westminster. LiTe apparently held little more in store for him. The authorities believea that at last he had run his race. Little did they reckon on Miner's K^stuteness. Wtfth two companions who with him were employed in the brickyard of the prison he began to J plan for escape almost on the first day of his incarcertion. Patiently and persistently the three worked, and on August 8, 1907, the three es caped through a tunnel they had dug beneath the wall surrounding tht.J brickyard. 1 Rewards were offered for Mlnar. His description was sent .broadcast.! His photograph adorned the walls of every police station and detective of-j fice in the country. Neither pains nor expense were spared In the J search for him, but all efforts were unavailing. "Old Bill" Miner disappee.red for more than three years. How he em ployed these years is not known. He was heard from first last February. J It was but a poor description the engineer and conductor of the South ern railroad train that was held up I in Georgia could give of the men who had participated in the hold-up. All I but one of the men, the trian men declared, were obviously young, but this one seemed to .be older. He be haved as if he was the head of the gang. He was about ? feet 8 inches in height, weight about 135 pounds, had gray hair and a perceptible squint. The warning to look out for such a man went into the police head quarters of many cities. When it reached the offices of the Pinker tons the same words were uttered without a moment:;' hesitation. "It's 'Old Bill' Miner." And it was. Three days after the hold-up a posse ol police came upon three of the bandits camped in the! woods near Gainesville. The arrival! of the police took the outlaws cum pletely by surprise, and before they could offer any resistance they were! manacled. j British Columbia has asked Geor gia to give up Miner in order that he may be taken back to Canada to I serve out his life sentence. Georgia, however, is more likely to hold its prisoner. Justice there will be the I same as in British Columbia. "Old Bill" Miner is doomed to .be sentenc ed to spend the rest of his days in J jail. To keep him there till the end o1' his days will be a more difficult matter ' Now that his career is about to close, many stories of the methods I Miner employed during all the years! he was an outlaw are being told. J Daring as he was, utterly devoid of nerves as he seemed to he, desperate In a pinch, ready to fight whenever there was a chance and equally ready to surrender if there seemed no chance, Miner never posed as a "bad man." Much of his success in elud ing arrest .between hold-ups was due to the quiet way in which he lived. And though he was quick and un erring with rifle and revolver he nev er shot to kill. To wound a pur suer was all he ever sought to do. His determination that murder should never be charged to his ac-j count was his principal reason when E. young man for always working alone. Jfoung Physician Drawn Into Mystery. Dr. Elliot, when he became assist ant to a country physician did not dream of bein? drawn into a mys tery. Mary Wilkins-Freeman in her novel "Doc. Gordon," tells how the young assistant slipped into the mys tery and out again. Fifty cents at Sims' Book Store. Warfield in "The Music Master." Could make the story more vivid, but you can have the old Music Mas ter's humor in your own home, in the form of an exquisitely illustrated book, for fifty cents at Sims' Book ooooo^^^^^^^^^o^^ooooot?f$0$0* 4 i Special Values to be found at the Store of Geo. V. Zeigler for the next ten days Commencing Th?rs. March 30 DO NOT FORGET THE TIME Space will not permit me to tell of all the values I am offering. Come to visit us and you will be convinced that a saving is in every purchase you make. X 2c 3c 5c Ederheimcr, Stein Sc Co. MAKERS A few thousand yards of Best Chambrlc and Ginghams at.8 A few hundred yards of Good Calicoes. A few hundred yards of Good Sea Island. 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