Atchison Daily Globe
Kansas, USA
17 October 1888
LONDON'S DISGRACE
SIR CHARLES WARREN AND HIS PACK OF HOUNDS
After He Tried Them by Letting Them Loose on His Own Trail He Turned Them Out to Follow Other Trails, and They Got Away - A Horrible Letter.
London had begun to forget all about the horrible Whitechapel murders, when one morning not long ago the great metropolis was
shaken from the innermost recesses of the city to the elegant suburbs that have been lately built for the occupation of the
wealthy and cultivated by the announcement that Sir Charles Warren's dogs were loose.
Sir Charles had for some time been training these dogs, with a view to having them track and tree (sic) the human fiend who
has been operating in Whitechapel, whenever that shrewd ghoul should kill another victim. All the world remembers how much
Sir Charles banked upon his bloodhounds and how he made himself a laughing stck of everybody by letting them chase his august
person one every early morning not long ago. One would imagine that his experience would have shaken his faith in the wisdom
of the scheme, for, so the account runs, they only succeeded in making even a fair showing one time in three.
The fact is, almost any one conversant with the employment of hounds for tracking persons will tell you, it is quite a
different matter for a dog to take up and follow a scent across a sparsely settled country, and through the intricate mazes
of a densely populated city.
It is not at all uncommon for a dog to quite lose the scent in the former instance because of one crossing track. In a
crowded metropolitan district like Whitechapel, where any given track would be criss-crossed by tens of thousands of other
tracks inside of an hour, the task of following the murderer by the scent would be altogether beyond the power of even the
keenest nosed dog.
And even if Sir Charles' experiments had been successful to a marked degree, the results would have justified no sanguine
expectations. For the experiments were made early in the morning when few people would be stirring, and the chance of
obliteration by subsequent trails would be at the minimum, whereas the search for the murderer would, very likely, have to be
made at a busy time of the day.
When Sir Charles lost the dogs he was trying them in the open country. They had been taken to a common in the suburbs and
there "laid on scent after scent."
Whether they showed any progress in the noble art of man hunting is not stated, but when let loose on what proved to be their
last run they were "lost sight of altogether", and "the men in charge were frantic." Certain carpers at Sir Charles' method
of running the police department have suggested that "perhaps some smart dog fancier has made a greart haul of the prize
hounds."
It is quite possible that this last exploit of Sir Charles Warren will move the London publications that sail under comic
colors to the printing of cartoons bearing upon the subject. Punch has already devoted considerable attention to the
Whitechapel matter, and here is a reduced reproduction of one of its cartoons, heading and all:
THE NEMESIS OF NEGLECT IS SHOWN HERE
Sir Charles Warren is a most extraordinary person, if we may believe the English newspaper stories about him. He doesn't seem
to have the slightest qualification for the position of chief of police, and the office came to him only because he was born
with patrician blood in his veins.
He has been a soldier, and a fairly good one, too - serving abroad - and therein, perhaps, lies much of the secret of his ill
success. If he had been willing to act simply as a figure head, let other and more capable men attend to the executive part
- the real work of the department - matters would probably never have reached such a pass as to render the Whitechapel
murders possible.
But, having won some reputation as a fighter of savages, he felt that he knew just how to preserve order in a city largely
composed of civilized people. Brooking no interference with his plan of conducting the affairs of the office of chief of
police on the lines of a military campaign, and fully imbued with the idea that the chief end of the police is to suppress
free speech and all sympathy with the Irish, whom he hates so bitterly, he devoted his energies to closing public places to
speakers who are dissatisfied with the existing order of things in England and the following and arrest of Americans and
others supposed to have a friendly feeling towards Erin's green isle. Of course it was not long before the Scotland Yard men
and the "bobbies" alike expended whatever abilities they possess in these directions, and what are on other countries are
considered the most hateful classes flourished unhurt and plied their criminal callings unmolested. In this connection are
presented portraits of Inspector Helstone and Coroner Baker, two officials who have ably seconded Sir Charles Warren's policy
of marked incapability.