All posts by Colin

k♥ Week Thirteen (ish)

I knew when I began to study Expert At The Card Table and all things Erdnase that I was jumping into a ambitious project. The fact that I started four months before we welcomed our second son into our lives was probably a little foolhardy. It has been a long time in-between posts and I need to and a ‘S’ to the year in the title but I finally seem to have enough time to get back here.

I haven’t stopped reading or working with cards. I have added a number of books to my stack since my last post that I will talk about soon. My card work has improved a lot as well, though I am still far, far from an expert.

I need to read back through the posts to see where I was with the various theories. There has been a new theory with some interesting facts by Chris Wasshurber that I want to discuss. Oh and a absolutely beautiful new edition of the book was released through Magicana that I have just started to read.

Q♥ Week 12

Falling a bit behind in posting due to life happening. This is going to be a bit of house keeping. I have added a gallery page if you are interested in the various editions of the book that I have added to my shelf along with other research material.

I am working on a page of links to interesting media related to Erdnase. Theory 11 recently hosted a podcast with Jason England who touches on his theories of Erdnase, I’ll post the link to on the new page.

And finally I am working on a bibliography page to keep proper track of sources and quotes as I go along and that will appear as soon as I remember the proper formatting for such a thing.

I am reading about Milton Franklin Andrews early days in The Man Who Was Erdnase right now and while it is interesting I have a bit of a problem with how often they quote passages from EATCT right from the start. Going in blind to this book one would think that there was no question Milton was Erdnase. Peppering the early part of the book with quotes from EATCT as examples of Milton’s opinions and way of thinking is rather misleading when there is little, so far, as hard evidence that he was the right man.

He is still an interesting character but so far there is not a lot to prove the claim. One of the most telling sections, in my opinion will be the two notes that were sent to the newspapers in which Milton Franklin offers alibis and surrender as this will give a sample of his writing ability.

J♥ Week Eleven

IMG_5848 (640x427)This is how quickly things have grown. I started the year off with my Dover edition and a new pack of red backed Bee playing cards and this is where things stack up now. It includes three more editions of Expert at the Card Table, the indestructible edition (which I have so far resisted dropping in a glass of water in case it isn’t), the ‘Bible’ edition and the Charles T Powner edition. The large stack of papers are a mixture of old newspaper articles, at this point mostly about Milton Franklin Andrews, the first volume of The Sphinx magazine that contains the first mention and first known advertisement for the books, and some print outs of articles I’ve found on line that I was concerned were risking being lost to the dusky corners of the internet. Oh and a print out of a pdf version of the book so that I can lay it flat and not have to break the spine on one of the other copies.

When this idea first popped into my head I mostly wanted to sit down and improve my card skills and maybe poke around a little bit into the history. The problem is the history is so fascinating that it is having the habit of taking over from the card work. I have seen ten different names linked to Erdnase and so far every one that I have read even a couple of lines about has a story worth following even if I don’t believe they wrote a word of EATCT.

The camera’s auto-focus seemed to like the copy of Ghosts of Colorado Springs and Pikes Peak so I will touch on that. It contains a story about the murder of Bessie Bouton and says that she still haunts the spot on Cutler Mountain today. The book was published in 2012 and mentions sightings as recently as 2011. On its own it is an okay ghost story but the ‘fact’ part of the story is an example of very lax research (and poor proof reading). The author refers to Milton Franklin Andrews as Andrew Franklin Milton multiple times, gets the timeline of the murder-suicide wrong and at one point ask the question ‘Could S.W. Erandise (yes she misspells Erdnase’s name wrong)be an anagram for Andrew Franklin Milton?’ No matter who you believe wrote Expert at the Card Table that answer to this question is no because an anagram uses every letter from the word or phrase in a different order at least once. She also refers to EATCT as an ‘infamous book’ instead of famous which is a pet peeve of mine.

Turns out I get angry when talking about this book so I’ll just say while I won’t be on the lookout for anything else by this author it did at least teach me to not trust everything I read with out further investigation. For a fair while most of what I knew about Milton Franklin Andrews (also not an anagram if you spell Erdnase correctly) came from reading an article in the San Francisco Call which seems to have gotten most things right also leaves out a fair bit that is covered in other papers. Though I guess it is not strange when dealing with con-men and murders that the facts are often not what they seem at first. So if you are apt to believe in ghosts and spend some time on Cutler Mountain you may just run in to poor Bessie Bouton.

Still doesn’t excuse poor proof reading. Or not understanding how an anagram works. Especially doesn’t excuse misusing infamous.

10♥ Week Ten

Bread and bones seem to be accountable for causing everything to come crashing down for Milton Franklin Andrews. After the brutal attack on Ellis, Milton and Nulda fled the Berkeley area stopping long enough to change clothes and appearance, Andrews visiting a barber and Nulda doing some quick clothes shopping.

In his book The Man Who Was Erdnase Barton describes their flight as a scene straight out of a movie, with the couple employing multiple modes of transport and doubling back on routes to stay a head of the police who were not too far behind. In a sign of the times, even though they took a roundabout and complicated route, they only traveled from the Berkeley rental at 2214 Ellsworth St a total of about 14 miles to 748 McAllister St in San Francisco where Nulda rented an upstairs room and managed to sneak Milton in a back door.

Police were out in force but it took three weeks for them to finally catch up to Milton Franklin Andrews. By November 1st Ellis had recovered enough to leave the hospital and give his deposition to the police, he then headed to the racetrack to study the action on the local tracks, and at the same time Detective Charles Schultz arrived from Colorado Springs where Milton was wanted in connection with the murder of Bessie Bouton. Police had displayed posters of the wanted couple and eventually were tipped off about Nulda’s whereabouts due, in part, to her shopping habits.

Nulda it seems was buying an unreasonable amount of bread for a single woman and this aroused suspicion at the local bakery. Milton was dyspeptic and lacking access to the health foods he consumed he was apparently living off the crusts of bread that Nulda was buying. Even though the woman in the posters police were putting up was not actually Nulda it was close enough to cause someone to contact the authorities.

Police contacted the family that lived in the main floor of the house Nulda was renting and arranged a plan to apprehend the suspects. Four officers arrived at the McAllister St home were one of them pretended to be a plumber to gain entry to the apartment. After a bit of protesting Nulda let him in to look around but still Milton Franklin was not seen (it is assumed that he was hiding in the closet at this point). The officer exited to the hallway and while discussing their next move two shots were heard from within the apartment. When the broke open the door the discovered Nulda dead on the bed, her hands clasped as in prayer, and Milton Franklin Andrews dead on the floor with a gun in one hand and mirror in the other that he used to make sure the self inflicted shot was perfectly aimed.

In one of Nulda’s stockings was found a letter written by Milton confessing to some of the crimes he was accused of and attempting to distance Nulda from any blame. It also mentioned that had he know that Ellis had an exceptionally thick skull, about twice what is normal according to a doctor that attended him after the attack, that he ‘would have used a pile driver instead of a hammer’.

I expected that The Man Who Was Erdnase would start off much earlier in Milton’s life and lead up to the murder suicide but it turns out it leads with that part of the story as well so I still don’t have much info on the connection that Milton Franklin Andrews has to The Expert At The Card Table as I am just a handful of pages into it. It does give a much fuller picture of Milton, Nulda and Ellis than the initial newspaper articles that I had read but I am looking forward to getting into the connections between Milton and the book.

genii2011I tracked down a copy of the September 2011 edition of Genii Magazine that was devoted to Erdnase. It looks at a different candidate so I have not yet delved in to it as I don’t want to focus on more that one theory at a time right now but am very happy to have it waiting for me.

9♥ Week Nine

Week nine for me was rather scattered, we were out of our home for much of it while we dealt with the mess of a burst pipe in the bathroom. It threw off everyone’s routine and this is the first time I find myself way behind in my post. I need to say thank you to my mom for taking us in for a week while all the fans and dehumidifiers dried out our house, and to my sister-in-law Lydia for helping get my copy of The Man Who Was Erdnase sent to me, and to Shawn for doing some great design work on the site for me.

I thought I was going to explain the tragic circumstances around Milton Franklin’s final day but then my copy of The Man Who Was Erdnase arrived and there is so much more to it that the couple of newspaper articles that I have read that I need to hold off a little longer. So instead of murder and death let’s have a musical interlude.

Years ago I used to listen to a CBC Radio show that was hosted by Bill Richardson. It is long enough ago that I forget which show, probably Richardson’s Roundup but I am not sure, but I do remember that every once in a while he would play strangely beautiful piece of music called ‘Jesus Blood Never Failed Me Yet‘. Gavin Bryars recorded an unknown homeless man singing and then looped the vocals over a classical composition. Over the years Bryars lengthened the piece from 25 minutes to 60 and then 74 minutes with the addition of Tom Waits.

While I was digging for newspaper articles I came across a mention of the BBC doing something about Erdnase. I thought that I was looking for a documentary so took a round about route to discover Gavin Bryars ‘A Man In A Room, Gambling’. Bryars name was vaguely familiar and it made sense as soon as I played the first track. The project involved Bryars music and Spanish artist Juan Munoz describing the manipulation of playing cards, including excerpts from Expert At The Card Table. Interestingly Bryars states ‘some of this material was culled from the writings of the extraordinary Canadian S. W. Erdnase’. It is the first mention of Erdnase being Canadian I have come across and I am I curious where that came from.

The project was modelled after the Shipping Forecasts that used, maybe still are, played before the news on the BBC. You can here Bryars talk a bit about it on soundcloud.

It is a strange album but has become a good soundtrack to shuffle and deal cards to.