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Beadle's Dime Library No. 27
Public domain · digitally restored by comicbooks.com
Pulp Fiction

Beadle's Dime Library No. 27

· February 19, 1878

# Museum Catalog Note

The Spotter-Detective: The Girls of New York, a serialized story by Albert W. Aiken, opens with the escape from Sing-Sing prison. John Blaine, imprisoned for assault (charged with intent to kill, though stated to be innocent), orchestrates an elaborate Sunday afternoon escape assisted by Jimmy Kent, the water-carrier. Blaine's crime involved self-defense against a mysterious long-pursued enemy during a midnight Broadway encounter. The escape employs resourceful sabotage: filing iron bars, tampering with gas lines and dark-lanterns, and cutting bell-ropes to delay alarm.

News of the breakout reaches New York Monday evening, triggering emotional responses from multiple women connected to Blaine—a yellow-haired beauty on Madison Avenue, an olive-complexioned woman at a fashionable hotel, and a dark-eyed seamstress on Fourteenth Street. Each reacts with apparent recognition and distress upon learning of Blaine's freedom, suggesting interconnected relationships and future plot complications.

About this artifact

Date
February 19, 1878
Rights
Public domain — free to view, share, and reuse.
Restoration
Digitally restored and hosted by comicbooks.com.

Part of our mission to preserve and restore the public-domain heritage of the medium.