Myrna Loy, reading her fortunes in the cards, in this 1930s photo.
Tag: Spooky
Poison Farm, 1916
Walking Dead, 1936
After hapless pianist and ex-con John Elman is framed for murder, he is resurrected by a scientist after his execution.(IMDb.com)
Halloween Postcards, 1900s
From Hell
Letter from Jack the Ripper, delivered in a box with half of a kidney. It was sent to George Lusk the Chairman of the Whitechapel Vigilance Committee
From Hell
Mr Lusk
Sor
I send you half the kidne I took from one women preserved it for you the other piece I fried and ate it was very nice. I may send you the bloody knif that took it out if only you wate a little longer.
Signed
Catch me when you can Mishter Lusk
Satan Crowned Them, 1917
Boris in the Black Cat, 1934
Mysterious Attacks, 1917
FATE PLAYED THIS GIRL GRIM TRICKS IN MYSTERIOUS ADVENTURES OF NIGHT
Miss Arline Coldwater. Victim Mysterious Attacks
Salt Lake City, Jan. 12.
In what weird web of fate has Arline Coldwater, 16, become entangled?
A grim, whimsical nemesis has three times sought out the girl in her bed in the dead of night and two times the hunt has been successful. There followed a most terrifying experience, the fearsome operation being exactly the same on both occasions.
All Salt Lake is agog trying to solve the riddle of these peculiar attacks.
Recently the girl was awakened at 4 in the morning to find the dark forms of two men at-her bedside. Before she could scream’ a hand closed over her lips. A gag was placed roughly between her teeth and bound around her head. In spite of her struggles she was carried to a granary in the rear of the Coldwater home.
Then came the intensely fiendish feature of the mysterious assault. The men bound her ankles, tied her wrists together with a rope, throwing the loose end over a rafter. The rope was tightened slowly. The girl was drawn upward until her toes barely touched the floor. The entire procedure was carried out in silence. The two men looked at each other, broiled and disappeared.
Four hours later the girl managed to work the gag loose. Her cries attracted her father. She was hysterical and half conscious when released. This was the second visit. A few nights before the mysterious pair had attempted to capture her, but she escaped, her screams arousing the neighborhood.
A week or so later she endured a similar experience. Her room was entered again at 4 in the morning. She was awakened by a man at her bed side. Again a hand stopped her cries. Again the gag was put in her mouth. Then the “unscrupulous assailants carried her to the granary and left her hanging by the wrists, her body, covered only by a night dress, exposed to the cold weather.
Hours later she once more slipped the gag from her mouth. Her screams attracted a neighbor. She collapsed when she was cut down.
The police are puzzled. The nature of the knots and the peculiar way in which she was drawn up from the floor preclude the possibility of the girl having tied herself. No violence beyond that necessary to subdue her struggles has been offered her. Robbery is not the motive of the attacks Nothing was touched in the house, except the girl.
The Coldwater home, which stands in a lonely spot beyond the edge of Salt Lake, is now being carefully guarded.
The Ferocious Man-eating Tree of Madagascar
It is from seven to ten feet high and something like a grape fruit in shape, with rough, ugly tendrils stretching out in all directions. The trunk is black and hard as stone.
At the top of. the tree are six palpi, six feet high, that rear straight up and twine and whirl about incessantly. There is a cup also at the top which contains a clear, appetizing looking fluid. But alas for him who drinks it. He becomes peculiarly crazed and unable to get down.
Then it is that the whirling palpi twine themselves slowly but surely about the helpless man until all life is gone. This species of tree is naturally avoided as a deadly serpent would be, and the natives consider that it is actually alive and possessed of an evil and terrible spirit. (Arizona Republican, October 19, 1913)
Sacrificed to a man-eating plant. American Weekly. September 26, 1920