Show HOW GUITEAU LOOES LOOKS vat galhn les pa picture deture ef of the in court A wild fierce man with a certain bravery of character liar acter such as booth in might bt excite the animal interest with 1181 his wild nesa hut but thid this dastard who killed without Tenso of enze and fo for r I no ao purpose beyond the fi filthiest I chica thirst of notoriety merited neither curiosity nor rage I detected hi him m ill in an instant after I entered the lie room though he sat among many other deop people e in the samo same kind of a chair and without any railing officers or anything to hedge him in I observed red a sort of a stubbed head licad of hair such as is seen in the criminal pictures of E england with hair bristly set low towards tho front and rather flat back in tho cornera corners uncleanly looking hair boorish under this ha hah i r was a nasty skin a little like a corpse with some reddishness dish ness overspreading over spreading ita its generally yellowish appearance the face was rather long and pear shaped around the chin was a considerable quantity of brownish beard yet without any warmth in its sandy hair the hair the skin and ani the beard all seemed to be dusty duay and dampened as though out of some graveyard the perspiration of this man appeared to be at fault though it was wolfish his countenance was not woeful at all in the middle of hid his forehead was wits a deep varying wrin wrinkle k the principal sign to me of probably decaying mental faculties it is generally said that a depression between the eyes shows allows a memory well gone in tins this case caso it was a deep depression with a sort of a wrinkle attachment which was agitated right and left like ills his flitting eyes which had a about them but not much rest ren except cop when something occurred occurred to excite bis his vanity if you were to meet this man inan small as ho he looks to bo be in the body in a lane somewhere t you wol would ild go past him very quickly and wonder if as you passed him whether lio lie was a little crazy or very wicked As a friend de described him to me he lie was one of those men who al ways wanted to do something that was not the thing to be done I adge that he be belongs in the number of that large tribe of ill bal alced americans who think that to publish ua bli sh a book of any kind is a lofty lofty pursuit even if nobody reads the book but the author to b be on a salary on a newspaper and find i serve ones day and generation is rather beneath human intelligence I looked at this man again and again but never with any increase increasing interest merely wondering i how to set before my rny mind and the public a little of the wandering that was shown in his bis countenance countenance but this I do not mean more than that something seemed to drive the man on uny an and on from point to I point from thought to thought P letting C eting him rest nowhere as if a voice voice was always crying out move mote on when he be halted I if you were to take your eye off him a few minutes and would bring it back ho he seems to have gone a hundred miles ince rince r you looked at him before that rapid nervous head had drawn him through great periods of space and of agitating suggestions he could no more pause than a it mad do dog ever wanting ing a drink ever frightened at the pool ever snapping ell ever mr da dashing shilie on I asked myself f the question if he was cra crazy zy and it looked to me very probable the observations ot persons I know who havo have seen much of guiteau since the killin killing is that he is not cognizant in mind min gd |